|
![]() Maling Pottery - An Introductionby David HolmesThe Maling Pottery of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, was in production from 1762 to 1963. In its heyday it claimed to be the biggest pottery in the world. Today's collectors are often in search of the factory's highly decorated lustre ware. But, for many years, Maling's stock in trade was everyday white ware - marmalade jars for Keillers and Coopers, crockery for railways, shipping lines and hotels, and a huge variety of domestic kitchenware. These items, too, are keenly sought after. In fact, it appears that there is hardly an aspect of the Maling factory output which does not attract one collector or another. The interest is not confined to the UK, but spreads around the world, as Maling had
a significant export trade. (In the 1920s they had showrooms in Australia, New Zealand and Denmark.)
The following brief history may be of interest to collectors. The Maling family were originally French Huguenots who fled their native country in the 16th century to escape religious persecution. The family settled in England where they became prosperous merchants. The first Maling pottery was established at North Hylton, near Sunderland, in 1762 by William Maling. He had interests in coal, timber and shipping, and the development of a pottery business fitted well with these. Pots fired in kilns heated by the loca lly-dug coal could be exported in William's ships, which would eventually return from Europe with timber. The business was continued by William's descendants who moved to the Newcastle area and built a succession of larger works. The last of these - the Ford B pottery - was begun in 1878 and occupied a 14 acre site. (This and its predecessor - the Ford A pottery - were named after Mary Ford, the daughter of an Edinburgh glass manufacturer, who had married into the Maling family.)
The driving force behind this expansion was Mary's husband, Christopher Thompson Maling. It is his initials which form one of the company's early factory marks - the letters CTM inscribed vertically inside a triangle. Later, this was extended into the trade
name "Cetem Ware" when the company adopted its well known trademark of a castle in the early years of this century. The "Cetem" name continued to be used into the 1930s.
Frederick Theodore Maling, the last family member to be actively involved in running the pottery, died in 1937. However, the Maling name (which had first appeared with the castle mark in the 1920s) continued to be used as a trademark until the factory finally closed in 1963. The outbreak of war in 1939 marked the beginning of a long decline. Many of the factory's workers were called up for military service, and wartime restrictions prevented decorative ware being produced for the home market. The factory was eventually sold to new owners, but struggled to compete against foreign competition because of its depleted workforce and outdated equipment. The contract to supply crockery to the London and North Eastern Railway Company was lost to a Ja panese firm who were able to undercut Maling's price by 75 per cent. Finally, the factory lost their contract with Ringtons, a north eastern tea company for whom Maling had produced tea caddies and other items since the 1920s. When the factory closed its doors for the last time in June 1963, the headline in the local Newc astle "Journal" told the story - "Competition kills city firm". For further information, please visit the Maling website. Maling Pottery Logo image courtesy of Steven Moore, Other images courtesy of David Holmes. |