07 June 2025

Wedgwood British pottery & U.S slavery


Portrait of Josiah Wedgwood
painted by Joshua Reynolds, Wiki

Josiah Wedgwood (1730–95) lived in Stoke-on-Trent. His family were potters in Nth Staffordshire & by the mid-1700s, the closeness of clay and coal helped turn that narrow Midlands valley into a success­ful ceramics centre. Smallpox swept through Burslem in the 1740s and the Wedgwoods were harmed. Josiah’s right knee was badly dam­aged, permanently stopping him using the pot­t­er’s wheel pedal. Instead he was attracted by the design, in­novat­ion and busi­ness aspects of the pottery trade.
 
Wedgwood’s success advanced the Potteries region in Stoke-on-Trent into an industrial revolution centre, and started to make his name well known. Wedgwood’s fusion of art and industry depended partial­ly on great glazes, while he was a junior partner to Thomas Whieldon (1754–9)

His key breakthrough came in the mid-1760s with cream-ware. Building on the work of Enoch Booth, Wedgwood designed a clean, functional and el­egant alternative to Chinese ceramics. The smooth, fine-textured body, cov­ered with a bril­l­iant glaze, also allowed for easy decoration by paint­­ing with enamels. Thus his pottery could fol­low fashion.

Bentley medalllions of King George III and Queen Charlotte, 1777
E & H Manners

With rising incomes, the challenge for Wedgwood (and partner Liverpool merchant Thom­as Bentley) was how to get the cream­ware noticed by a smart public. Here was where Wedgwood’s marketing skills stepped in. Fashion was much superior to merit in many resp­ects, he believed; one had only to make choice of proper sponsors. And his best sponsor was German Queen Charl­otte, whose patronage of his tableware service turned cream­ware into Queens­ware and raised Wedgwood to Her Majesty’s Master Potter.

Most techniques in modern salesmanship, from prod­uct placement to the use of influencers, were utilised by Wedgwood and Bentley. Their West End showroom was more commercial gallery and show space than shop.

The first modern factories in Stoke-on-Trent ensured efficient delivery of ornamental pott­ery and tableware, and new levels of quality prod­uct­ion. Then came Black Bas­alt and Pearlware. Finally Jas­per was invented in the mid-1770s, the most orig­inal of all Wedgwood’s ceramic mater­ials. The pale-blue Jasper body with white neo-classical reliefs show­ed his years of ex­per­im­entation with clays, kilns, cobalt and iron ox­ide, in his base­ment laboratory. It won him a Fellowship of the Royal Society!

Beautiful Jasperware teaset
Sunday Times
  
Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802) had co-founded the Lunar Society in 1765. It met monthly at Matthew Boulton’s Soho House in Birm­ingham, to debate the first discoveries and observ­at­ions. Along with poly­maths Joseph Priestly and James Watt, this was a dis­cuss­ion group where intellectuals, thinking industrial­ists and natural philos­ophers could get together in a rad­ic­al environ­ment. Wedgwood was a good fit for that rad­ical circle of C18th thinkers, keenly ex­amining minerology, ast­r­onomy and med­icine. Apparent­ly the origins of the Engl­ish Enlightenment were not in Oxford or Cam­brid­ge, but in the Midlands. However The Lunar Society never discussed party politics, even though its members were largely sympathetic to liberalism and internationalism.

In 1780 Wedgwood joined the Society for Constitutional Information and became friendly with new reformers. This organisation of social reform­ers was dedicated to publishing political tracts and educating cit­izens on their lost ancient liberties. It promoted the work of camp­aig­ners for parliamentary reform eg Tom Paine.

Wedgwood’s politics were born of radical patriotism: a deep love of  his country along a fearful sense that the promise of Great Britain (liberty under the law, Protestantism and progress) was being undermined. As a democrat, Wedgwood supported the rebel MP John Wilkes in his campaigns for parliamentary reform and franchise spread.

When the Bastille was stormed in 1789, Wedg­wood was excited by the pros­pect of radical change in France. The pol­it­icians thought that as a man­uf­act­urer, Wedgwood would be ruin­ed if France had her liberty, but he risked it. Wedg­wood stopped mak­ing his Jasper medallions of Queen Marie Ant­oi­nette, favouring a new figure of France embracing Liberty.

His most lasting contribution to C18th radicalism was probably his camp­aign ag­ainst the Transatlantic slave trade. Strange, since for decades Wedg­wood & Bent­ley’s success had been closely intertwined with the rich­es deriv­ed from the Atlantic slave economy! Not only was the grow­ing wealth of the Georgian consumer market buoyed by slavery’s prof­its, but the tea rit­uals Wedgwood supplied were linked to slave owners’ estates.

Still, by the 1780s Wedgwood was convinced of slavery’s innate evil. Voted onto the Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, he used his design and marketing skills to create the defining symbol of anti-slavery activism: white Jasper with an enslaved African in black relief. This symbol was called the Em­ancipation Medallion. Whether worn in bracelets or as hair pins, fashion promoted the cause of justice and freedom. By displaying the extent of public support for the anti-slavery movement and by reminding civil soc­iety of the suffering endured by Af­ric­­an sl­av­es, the medallion actively participated in the abolition campaign. [Slavery in the British colonies was abol­ished in 1807] 

Em­ancipation Medallion
Am I Not a Man and a Brother, 1787

In Sept 1792, Earl Macartney left Britain aboard HMS Lion, via Cape of  Good Hope to Tientsin-Tianjin, the Chin­ese port city. The passeng­ers included c100 of Georgian Brit­ain’s finest scientists, nat­ur­al phil­osophers and draught­smen. There were also c600 crates of objects carefully chosen to showcase Britain’s industrial might. Mac­artney’s mission was to convince China’s Celestial Court to open their huge markets to British imports, to excite a taste for Eng­lish workman­ship. The Wedgwood vases prom­oted Britain’s belief in its design and manufacturing prowess even further.

Since Macartney sailed to China (1790s), Wedgwood’s pottery earned nat­ional pride for British art and des­ign. His tech­nol­ogy and de­sign, ret­ail prec­is­ion and man­ufacturing efficiency trans­for­med prod­uction and ushered in a mass consumer society. All the C18th’s great themes were em­bedded in his art: enlight­en­ment, liberty and nat­ional identity. Now his prog­ressive int­er­nationalism may also become a source of patriotic pride

Read Tristram Hunt, The Radical Potter: Josiah Wedgwood and the Trans­formation of Britain, Allen Lane, 2021.





32 comments:

  1. Tristram Hunt's The Radical Potter compellingly portrays Josiah Wedgwood as a visionary who fused art, industry, and radical politics to transform both British ceramics and the moral conscience of a nation.

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    1. roentare
      I am very pleased you found the Hunt reference useful. I agree with everything you said about Wedgwood as a visionary who fused art, industry and radical politics. The part I hadn't realised myself before Hunt's book was the importance of science in Wedgwood's life.

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  2. I first saw Wedgwood's Portland vase Jasperware made in 1790 in Stoke-on-Trent. I offered the Victoria and Albert Museum a fair price for the impressive treasure, but my offer was rejected.

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    1. Deb
      I also had little idea what the first edition of the Portland vase was worth, so I checked with a few auction houses. From $168,500 USD (RAU) to $350,000.00 AUD (Etruria). Perhaps you didn't offer enough.

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  3. It's amazing how art and design can intersect with social justice movements, using fashion as a vehicle to advocate for change and raise awareness about critical issues. Thank you for this article and the wonderful photos of this art!!

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    1. Katrina
      art and design people run a major risk when they associate themselves with anything controversial like a social justice movement. They risk losing their colleagues, incomes and stable employment in the future. Even joining the Society for Constitutional Information was a very brave thing for Wedgwood to do.

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  4. I believe Charles Darwin was the grandson of Josiah Wedgewood and married Emma Wedgewood his first cousin, who was also a grandchild of Josiah Wedgewood.

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    1. Fun60
      what an amazing family!!! And I would add Francis Galton as another brilliant cousin. Have a look at Media Storehouse's tree:
      https://www.mediastorehouse.com.au/fine-art-finder/artists/english-photographer/good-effects-cousin-marriages-22770328.html

      I would normally hope first cousins wouldn't marry each other, but perhaps they wanted to keep the genius genes for their children and grandchildren.

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  5. Amazing how in those times pottery work could be so intricate!

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    1. Pradeep Nair
      Yes! The work was sooo intricate, I will give you the time taken for just one object: This is a Wedgwood vase, made in black and white jasper. The white top layer of jasper has been pressed into moulds and then applied to the black vase. Wedgwood only made 30 copies between 1790 and 1795.

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  6. Anti slavery is something I feel I should know more about. It's good to know that an important person such as Wedgewood was against slavery, and what a poignant design showing a slave in chains.

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    1. Andrew
      I used to be able to identify pottery pieces by their style and markers on the back, and I knew all about Wedgwood's modern industrial manufacturing methods and his ads.

      But I didn't remember his patriotic campaign against slavery. It seemed contraindicated, since the British Industrial Revolution depended on selling more and more products overseas, regardless of those colonies' behaviours. All the more credit to Wedgwood and his colleagues for displaying the extent of their public support for the anti-slavery movement.

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  7. Most interesting. I hadn't realised Wedgwood's commitment to the abolition of slavery.

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    1. jabblog
      me either. I normally assume that capitalists do _anything_ to ensure their industries make a fortune, including providing goods for slave plantations, and exploiting indigenous populations in the colonies. Furthermore he protected his own English workers from disease and poverty.

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  8. Read "Wedgwood’s Abolition Journey" by Kate Turner in The V & A Blog
    Thomas Bentley was Josiah Wedgwood’s friend and business partner, advising Wedgwood on matters from taste and fashion to commercial advancement, and influencing his views on the slave trade. As Nonconformist Protestants, or Rational Dissenters, Wedgwood and Bentley championed equality for groups including women and the working classes.

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    1. V & A
      I noted that Wedg­wood & Bent­ley’s success had been closely intertwined with the rich­es deriv­ed from the Atlantic slave economy! And others. But I had no idea that Thomas Bentley was as committed to ending slavery as his partner.
      "Wedgwood’s abolition journey" was excellent on Wedgwood's connection with Pres Benjamin Franklin.

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  9. I love that medallion it's beautiful. Interesting reading about Wedgwood. Had a piece given to me in the late 50's but one day it just fell apart, it broke in the middle and no I didn't touch it before that happened.

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    1. Margaret
      What was the medallion given to you 75 years ago? If it was an original piece of Wedgwood, have the pieces repaired and get it valued. You may be surprised :)

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  10. Hello Hels, I remember a while ago when the bottom dropped out of the Wedgwood market (except for the better antique pieces) and teapots and little boxes, etc. as in your photo could be had for as little as US$1. We made a few judicious purchases, but now prices are going back up, although there are still bargains to be found.

    In the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, there is a 1796 satinwood Broadwood piano designed by Sheraton (his only confirmed actual piece) and decorated with Wedgwood medallions:
    https://collections.mfa.org/objects/51248/grand-piano?ctx=eb9c1d9f-7f2a-4e3c-aedc-9e64673f120a&idx=16

    When I worked there in the early musical instruments department, I often played this piano, either for demonstration or for my own amusement.

    The Macartney mission to China was pretty much a failure. The emperor was not impressed with England's trinkets or its naval power--he only wanted England's silver in payment for Chinese exports.
    --Jim

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    1. Parnassus
      I haven't been to an auction house since I lost my full time income, years ago.

      The Guardian (Jn 2009) wrote:
      Waterford Wedgwood, the 250-year-old maker of luxury glassware and china, fell in administration today, putting 2,700 jobs in the UK and Ireland at risk. The brands include Waterford crystal, Wedgwood and Royal Doulton fine bone china and Rosenthal porcelain.

      Waterford Wedgwood has suffered from falling demand for its high-quality crystal, china and other tableware, and has recorded a loss for the last five years. It was forced to call in the administrators after its lenders, led by Bank of America, refused to postpone its interest payments for a fourth time.

      What has happened since this Guardian article?

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  11. I had not heard of Josiah Wedgwood he sounds like and interesting chap, have heard of Wedgwood tableware

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    1. Jo-Anne
      as I told Fun60, this had to be one of the most learned and successful families in British history. The Wedgwoods, Darwins and Francis Galton were brilliant spouses, children and cousin. See the family tree:
      https://www.mediastorehouse.com.au/fine-art-finder/artists/english-photographer/good-effects-cousin-marriages-22770328.html

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  12. I could pick out Wedgewood pottery any day (or at least I think I can-grin), but most of what I knew of their success was that Charles Drawn ended up related to the Wedgewood's through his mother. Because of that, he had money enough to spend his life doing his experiments that backed up his ideas about evolution. Without the Wedgewood inheritance, I wonder if he could have spent so much time developing his theory and some proof of it.

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    1. Erika
      it is a great family. Charles Darwin's mother Susannah Wedgwood, was the daughter of Josiah Wedgwood, making Charles the 5th of their 6 children. He was also the grandson of Erasmus Darwin on his father's side. Young Charles was skilled at natural history and collecting at a young age and was warmly supported by his clever and wealthy family.

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  13. I heard of Wedgewood. Although not knowing all that much about the family line.

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    1. peppylady
      me either. When I did art history at uni 35 years ago, emphasis was placed on the fine arts - paintings, sculpture and architecture. I remember VERY few lectures on the decorative arts - porcelain, gold and silver, timber arts etc.

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  14. I listened to a very interesting podcast on the opium wars and they described the expedition to by Britain to China to show them British wares as a total humiliation to Britain . Apparently the English were spending so much money on buying tea that it threatened to cause a huge trade imbalance as the Chinese were not at all interested in buying British and so the=is effort was mounted . When it failed , the brits hit on the idea of getting the Chinese buying opium which was produced in India . They actually banned the Indians from growing foot crops and instead had them growing opium and when it was discovered that smoking opium made it even more addictive all the better !! .They also engaged Indian traders in getting it across the borders to China so the British could look better by not being overtly involved. The Indians died because of famine due to not growing their crops and the Chinese had their society undermined and all for a cup of tea !!!! This was the basis of the claim to "the century of humiliation" which is fueling some of the anti western feeling in China today .

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    1. mem
      as you noted, the colonising powers treated the colonised populations like slaves, even in those nations that did not declare they had slave populations. But Portugal, Spain, Britain, France, Holland etc did not _choose_ to be the world's most brutal killer colonisers... they did it to be profitable traders.
      So how is it that brutal treatment of indigenous populations continued for hundreds of years? Why were the churches silent? Why did organisations like Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade fail for such a long time?

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  15. Too much skin in the game !!

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  16. Thank you for teaching me about Wedgwood. We have a beautiful meaty set we received for our wedding and it is lovely to use.

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  17. Handmade
    Wealthy families were delighted with golf, silver and fine porcelain dinner services but most families had to put up with cheap stuff. Wedgwood and his colleagues, bless them, designed dinner sets that were long lasting and attractive to look at.
    Perfect for wedding presents :)

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