- Pinder, Bourne & Co.
- Unnamed (Peaceful Mourning), 1879
- Earthenware
- 9.25 x 9.25 in (23.5 x 23.5 cm)
-
Not For Sale
Soup plate, 9.25 inches diameter. Black transfer with polychrome clobbering. Maker is Pinder, Bourne & Co. The impressed mark on the back has the maker's name. The impressed numbers 79-9 are most likely the date the object was made (September 1879). A somber scene with a young girl sitting on a raised grave with a religious post at the head. The grave is covered with a green cloth or perhaps grass, and tall grasses and daisies bloom at the head of the grave. The girl is weaving grasses and flowers into a wreath which may hang on the wooden marker later. A dog is curled up and sleeping at her feet.
The partners were Thomas Shadford Pinder and Joseph Harvey Bourne. Thomas Pinder had previously operated from the Swan Bank Works from 1848 and the Fountain Place Works from c. 1852. In 1851 he was joined by two partners and they operated as Pinder, Bourne and Hope (Thomas Pinder, Joseph Harvey Bourne, and John Hope). In 1860 they moved to the already existing Nile Street Works. In 1862 Mr. Hope left the partnership and stayed at the Fountain Place Works - the Nile street works continued as Pinder, Bourne & Co. At some time, Joseph Bourne left the business. The '& Co.' were John Harris and Ernest Joban Berg. In 1877 notice for liquidation by arrangement was made by Thomas Shadford Pinder, John Harris, and Ernest Joban Berg, co-partners of Pinder, Bourne & Co. In 1877 Henry Doulton, of the Lambeth (London) pottery company Doulton & Co., was approached by Pinder, proposing he become a partner in the firm of Pinder, Bourne and Co. for an outlay of £12,000, but the money was unwisely spent and differences of opinion caused such a rift between the two concerns that only arbitration could resolve the matter. Pinder retired and Henry Doulton continued with the business. The name of Pinder, Bourne & Co. continued to be used until 1882 when it became Doulton & Co. Ltd.
- Subject Matter: Tableau
- Collections: British Transferware (1800-1930), Pinder, Bourne & Co.