
Thames-side Hunting Jugs
/bigger>Mortlake and Vauxhall in the early 1800’s
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Nicholas Johnson (v.5 6/07)

Figure 1: Four Thames-side hunting jugs
The four unmarked jugs shown above will look familiar to all
admirers of British stonewares. In this article, I speculate that
these pieces/fontfamily>1/smaller>/fontfamily>
were made under the auspices of a single family. While the Kisheres
of Mortlake, who occasionally marked their wares,2 /smaller>
are well-known, the unmarked pots made by William Wagstaffe
and his nephew, John Wisker have not been identified.
These hunting wares were very widely produced
throughout the 18th and 19th Centuries. They were the most “special”
of the utilitarian brownwares/fontfamily>3/smaller>/fontfamily>,
and were found in every home as well as in commercial
establishments. The more decorative jugs and mugs of the hunting
type were used largely for the storage and serving of ale. This
article will focus on early 19th Century wares (1800-1820),
about which little is known which would associate particular pieces
with the pottery where they were made.
Most hunting jugs and mugs, and certainly most of those which have
survived, were made between 1860 and the early 20th Century. We now
have precise knowledge, based largely on marked examples, of the
extensive range of hunting jugs produced by some six potters of this
late 19th Century period. The research is laid-out by Philip
Mernick of London on this website. Among the interesting discoveries
from this research are that the potters tended not to copy
each other’s sprig designs exactly/fontfamily>4/smaller>/fontfamily>;
that they used some sprigs (applied reliefs) on only certain of the
five to nine sizes of jugs they made; and that they made use of
different sized versions of some sprig designs.5/smaller>
We have also learned more recently about the earliest of the
hunting wares, produced on Thames-side and in Bristol. These grand
mugs and jugs were often personalized, and dated from 1712 to the
1760’s. From then on, the traditional hunting wares were developed
by the Sanders pottery in Mortlake and by the White family at Fulham
Pottery. From around 1800, there were also two or three potteries
making stonewares in Vauxhall, Kishere’s in Mortlake, and in time
Doulton & Watts, etc./fontfamily>6/smaller>/fontfamily>
More recent surveys of eighteenth and nineteenth century hunting
wares have also yielded important findings7/smaller>.
Noël Hume has considered the variants of a punch party scene which
took a central place on the giant mugs of the mid 18th Century, as
well as appearing on many Mortlake pieces of around 1800. He
suggests that, rather than being based upon Hogarth’s Midnight
Modern Conversation of 1731, the punch party plaque found from
around this date may reflect a ceramic design by Hogarth made
several years earlier.
Noël Hume also recently discovered an unrecorded, mid-19th-Century
potter, John Bacon, of Bradley, near Bilston in the Midlands, as
another maker in the hunting jug tradition./fontfamily>8/smaller>/fontfamily>
Most importantly, Bacon was shown as the probable author of one of
the finest known examples of a small hunting mug, which can be seen
at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, England.9/smaller>
Despite these advances in scholarship, very little is known of
hunting ware potters during the first half of the 19th
Century, a period during which at least fifty British potters made
brownwares, and in many cases hunting or other “figured” wares.
Makers worked within a strong tradition, which can make many
products from different sources appear surprisingly similar.
However, the four jugs considered here appear, stylistically, to be
from the first third of the 19th Century and probably from the
London area. Ceramically, this means a long stretch of the South
Bank of the winding Thames, from Mortlake in the west to Vauxhall, a
part of Lambeth, on the western fringe of London proper.
The true hunting wares showed a hunt, normally running to the left
around the lower half of the piece. The sprig showing the quarry -
variously a deer, fox or rabbit - was quite variable, as were the
individual or paired hounds and the mounted huntsmen. Handles,
however, were often finished with a quite distinctive terminal,
sometimes attached by simulated screw-heads. An upper row of sprigs
presented pastoral elements (for example, one or more trees,
a mill or a farmyard) and, increasingly through the century,
convivial figures. These “topers” include many versions of Toby
Fillpott, often accorded the central place given on earlier examples
to large plaques of the Midnight Conversation or of other
scenes./fontfamily>10/smaller>/fontfamily>
Our mental map of London-area products has always been overly
grounded in the supposedly “known” potteries. Thus for many years
all large, early mugs were said to be “Fulham.” Today, all probable
Mortlake pots tend to be described as “Kishere“ - despite the very
wide range in appearance and sprigging which they present. We should
not ignore the old Sanders pottery, despite its lack of marked
pieces. It was bigger in area than Kishere’s, and taxed more highly,
as late as 1811, and yet none of its wares are clearly known.11/smaller>
However, from 1805 until 1825, the Wagstaffe/Wisker (W/W) family are
known to have run both the old Sanders pottery in Mortlake
and the Vauxhall Pottery. (Wisker, who was Wagstaffe’s nephew, took
over both operations when the older man died in 1808.) Others have
thought it likely that they made hunting wares, using at least some
personnel, techniques and sprig designs taken over from Sanders (as
may the young Joseph Kishere, who virtually grew up at Sanders’,
when he started his own pottery in 1797.)
The two large jugs first illustrated are of Mortlake type and, I
shall argue, represent the stoneware production of the Sanders’
pottery while under control from Vauxhall. They appear to span the
W/W period, from 1805-25.
The first of the six-pint jugs (A, left) shown in Figures 1(
above) & 2, is clearly of Mortlake type, with the ribbed neck
characteristic of around 1800, and the plain handle terminal (not
turned under as was more common at Kishere’s.)

Figure 2: Jugs A and B
According to what others have written, three distinctive sprigs tie
jug A to the Sanders factory: the tall tree with gate, the dog
emerging from a cottage and the tall windmill.

Figure 3: Sprigs from jug A associated with Sanders’ Pottery,
Mortlake
The other large jug (B) is of later date, without neck ribbing and
with an elaborate handle terminal (see Figure 5), based upon the
so-called “standard early terminal” of overlapping leaves but with
added, trailing hop blossoms. Its only “Sanders” sprig is the tree
and gate, identical to that on jug A.
Both jugs show other rare/fontfamily>12/smaller>/fontfamily>
and, we would thus hope, distinctive, sprigs. “A” has a central
plaque of two horsemen, probably hunters, with a dog on a
cross-country ride, as well as a huntsman below with his crop raised
over his head.

Figure 4: From Jug A
Jug “B” includes a sprig of a huntsman, about to cross a bridge over
a rushing stream, as well as an uncommon windmill with a diagonal
ladder and the miller standing in the doorway.

Figure 5: Terminal, huntsman on bridge and mill, Jug B
Although similar, the only direct link between these two jugs
is the tall tree with gate. However, a similarly shaped, ribbed-neck
jug to “A” published in Hildyard’s Browne Muggs (#171) has
the three sprigs (from Fig. 3, above) which he mentions as
tied to Sanders, and he surmises that jugs of this group “may be
products of Sanders’ pottery.” Another jug belonging to D. Holman of
London has the two horsemen with dog from “A” and both the
huntsman with bridge and the uncommon windmill from “B” (see
Figure 10). Jugs A and B do thus seem to be very closely
related.
Two smaller (quart) jugs, “C” and “D”, are now illustrated as
probably of the same W/W general origin.

Figure 6 Jugs C (left) and D
These two jugs show none of the larger sprigs already discussed but,
as Mernick has plausibly shown, such sprigs may have been used only
on larger pieces./fontfamily>13/smaller>/fontfamily>
The W/W attribution follows from the exact matches of some of
their toper sprigs to those found on jugs A and B.
Three grouped toper figures were introduced in the first decade of
the 19th Century14/smaller>, and they largely
supplanted an earlier group of five toper types. Of these, Toby
Philpott appears most prominently and in many versions. He was taken
by several makers of sprigs from an engraving published, together
with the mythic drinking song The Brown Jug, in 1761.
The other two toper figures have been called the Thinker (facing to
our right) and the left-facing Smoker. In contrast to the very
varied representation of, say, trees, the two toper figures were
standardized, with Thinkers and Smokers seeming to be archetypes
adopted by one pottery after another.


Figure 7 Thinker and Smoker topers from jugs A (left) and C.
Note the impressed grasses on the base of both Thinkers.
It is difficult to determine the origin or period
of a jug from its toper figures, the dogs in the hunt, or their
quarry. However, it may well be that the use of the three topers was
introduced to Mortlake from Vauxhall. The jugs with topers but
without characteristically Sanders sprigs could also have been made
in Vauxhall.
Jug A shows topers identical to those of
jug C, including the surrounding foliage (which is often varied) -
and the identity extends to tiny plants impressed in the Smoker’s
base; jug B has a rare Thinker variant (on half-barrel);
while “C” and “D” have exactly the same Toby. (Jug B has a slight
variant differing only in its octagonal, piecrust table.) In another
resemblance, Jug A has the tall windmill, and jug C what looks to be
a shorter version of it (not illustrated by other writers.)


Figure 8: “tall windmill from Jug A (left), thought to be
characteristic of Sanders’ Pottery, and smaller version from Jug C.
Each of the above three Tobies in our group of four jugs sits at
a tripod table, wears a hat which looks like a sou’wester, and has a
prominent pocket extending to our right. Despite the difference in
jug capacities from 2 to 6 pints, the Tobies are all the same size.

Figure 9: The three Toby sprigs from, left to right, jugs C,
B and D.
This same Toby is shown, together with the
huntsman with upraised crop from “A” (see Figure 4), on a
two-handled mug which Noël Hume hesitantly attributes to “Derbyshire
or Bristol,” but with little obvious justification./fontfamily>15/smaller>/fontfamily>
No other published photograph of this sprig has been found.
Jugs “C” and “D” are thus strongly linked to “A” and “B” through
their topers, but were they were made in Mortlake as opposed to
Vauxhall? Some of our focus group of four jugs may have been made
under Wagstaffe/Wisker management at Sanders’, while some may come
from their Vauxhall works.
Two other jugs (“108” and “120S,”belonging to Philip Mernick and
illustrated in Figure 10) have links to the above four focus
jugs through distinctive sprigs (the “hops” terminal, Thinker on
half-barrel and Toby with pocket.) #120S on the right shares only
one distinctive sprig with the others, namely the tree and gate, and
may be a rare example of a Sanders sprig used as part of a
Vauxhall-made piece. It might be by Patrick, another Vauxhall
potter.



Figure 10: Three related jugs in London collections: D.
Holman jug (left), Philip Mernick Jugs 108 and 120S, as discussed in
text.
In his overview of the hunting wares, Noël Hume/fontfamily>16/smaller>/fontfamily>
presents another group of finely made jugs (his Figure 17), all with
the “standard early terminal” and a rather simplified range of
topers and trees. He identifies them as Mortlake or Lambeth
(presumably including Vauxhall) 1830-35.
Two jugs from this group (see Figure 11) suggest that they
are distinct from the W/W group as well as from Kishere and Fulham
products. However, jug D could belong to this group, and it is
certainly possible that it represents the later products of the
Vauxhall Pottery, ca. 1830. A further unidentified group (using

Figure 11: Two jugs from group with standard early terminal,
(from INH, left, and NJ) possibly from another London pottery
the #11, “curly tab,” terminal from OH&H, and
which may well not be from London) is currently being examined by
Mernick.
Thus the hunting wares discussed above seem to
represent around six London potteries (Sanders (W/W), Kishere,
Vauxhall, Patrick, Fulham + 1?) all operating for much of the
1800-30 period. Presumably, Doulton and Watts are candidates for the
unfilled “slot.” Before long, we should be able to distinguish these
potters’ closely related hunting wares. The above potters sustained
the “hunting” message for a generation, and laid the basis for the
greatly increased production to come.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am greatly indebted to Ivor Noël Hume and
Philip Mernick for their suggestions and criticisms, and for their
continuing contributions to our discussion of British brownwares.
/smaller>NOTES
1. The above set of jugs came together as a unit
when jug A was acquired: the latest to me but the earliest in date,
and with the clearest links to what has been proposed by others
about the Sanders production. The links then found between jug A and
jug B, and between jugs B, C and D, allows us to propose a tentative
story about the W/W potters. Such stories attempt to discover
meaning, while they also create meanings which may turn out to be
misleading.
2. See Jack Howarth and Robin Hildyard, Joseph Kishere and the
Mortlake Potteries, Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors’
Club, 2004, for the fullest account of the Kishere pottery.
3. British brown stonewares were thoroughly covered by Adrian
Oswald, with Robin Hildyard and R.G. Hughes, in English Brown
Stoneware 1670-1900, London: Faber and Faber, 1982 and by Robin
Hildyard in Browne Muggs, London: Victoria and Albert Museum,
1985.
4. Since the potters tended to know each other, and to make
agreements on pricing, it might have been embarrassing to copy
exactly.
5. For accounts of these potteries, see the above-cited references
and Derek Askey, Stoneware Bottles, Barnsley, S. Yorkshire,
BBR Publishing, 1998.
6. Prominent mid-century makers include Doulton, Stiff and a handful
of other London area potters, Bourne of South Derbyshire, Scottish
potteries and some Bristol potters, usually in the lighter Bristol
glaze. A very large number of C19 stoneware potteries were described
in the 1980’s by Hildyard and associates (see 3), and Hildyard and
Howarth have recently surveyed the history of stoneware production
in Mortlake, with special attention to the Kishere factory (see 1).
7. See, for example, W.W. Hamilton Foyn: “Dated London Brown
Saltglazed Hunting Mugs 1713-75,” English Ceramic Circle
Transactions, 17 pt. 2, 2000 and Ivor Noël Hume, “A-Hunting We
Will Go! from Vauxhall to Lambeth, 1700-1956” in Ceramics in
America ed. Robert Hunter, Hanover, NH: University Press of New
England for the Chipstone Foundation, 2004, 179-245.
8. See Ivor Noël Hume, “John Bacon - Prince of Potters” in
Ceramics in America, ed. Robert Hunter, Hanover, NH: University
Press of New England for the Chipstone Foundation, 2005, 20-36.
9. See
http://potweb.ashmolean.org/PotChron7-56a.html .
10. See Nicholas Johnson: “The Hunting Jug and its Cousins,” in
Antique Bottle Collector - UK, Nos. 16 & 16, 2002-3. In only a few
cases do we know the maker and approximate date of hunting wares
made in the 1800-50 period. Some makers sometimes marked or dated
their wares, and excavations at certain pottery sites have also
provided information. In these ways, some pieces - by Kishere of
Mortlake, Patrick of Vauxhall, the White family of Fulham, Bourne of
Derbyshire, etc. - can be identified. The vast majority of pots,
made when hunting wares were becoming quite ubiquitous, are hard to
identify and date. For example, there might be little agreement as
to whether a mug is from Derbyshire, Yorkshire, Liverpool or
Bristol.
Ivor Noël Hume, in his characteristically entertaining If These
Pots Could Talk, Milwaukee: Chipstone Foundation, 2001, 171-3,
engages in such a puzzled discussion on the origin of a large beer
jug.
11. The same is true of the venerable Vauxhall Pottery, down the
river on the edge of Lambeth, at which the hunting mug had
originated 100 years earlier. Although it was in operation until
about 1830, no C19 pieces are known from it. For more on the
relative sizes and production of the two Mortlake potteries in the
1810’s see Jack Howarth and Robin Hildyard, Joseph Kishere ands
the Mortlake Potteries, 35 et seq , 42 and 64, and Ivor
Noël Hume, “A-Hunting We Will Go! from Vauxhall to Lambeth,
1700-1956” in Ceramics in America, ed. Robert Hunter, 194-5.
Although the old Sanders works made both delftware and stoneware, it
employed around a dozen men, more than the Kishere family could
employ, and the property paid around three times as much in property
taxes.
12. The sprigs described here as “rare” because they are almost
unrepresented in the literature consulted. For example, I can find
no illustration of the above windmill, even though Howarth and Hildyard show five (from Mortlake alone), Oswald, Hildyard and
Hughes illustrate 15 and Noël Hume (A-Hunting We Will Go!) shows 18.
The terminal with hops is similarly missing among up to 20 examples,
and the tree with gate is similarly rare among trees.
13. Jug D appears to be the latest, and is linked to the other three
jugs comparatively weakly, through its Toby sprig and perhaps its
close-paired hounds. However, its domed lid suggests a date of no
later than 1820.
14. Having been inspired by the sprigs on finer, dry-bodied
stonewares of the Adams type, ca. 1800.
15. See Ivor Noël Hume, “A-Hunting We Will Go! from Vauxhall to
Lambeth, 1700-1956” in Ceramics in America, ed. Robert
Hunter, 2004, 211. Comparing these Toby sprigs raises the question
of how similar they need to be to claim an identical origin. Many of
the apparent differences between virtually identical designs can be
explained by the need to remake working molds after they become
clogged and the distortions inherent in their application to the
curved surface of the pot.
16. Ivor Noël Hume, “A-Hunting We Will Go! from Vauxhall to Lambeth,
1700-1956” in Ceramics in America, ed. Robert Hunter, 2004,
179-245, Fig 17, 209.