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  2. Maling pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maling_pottery

    The pottery was founded at North Hylton, Sunderland in 1762, [1] and transferred to Newcastle upon Tyne in 1817. [2] Increasing business allowed the Maling family to build two further potteries, each bigger than its predecessor. The last of these occupied a fourteen acre site, [3] and was claimed by Maling to be the biggest pottery in Britain.

  3. History of Newcastle upon Tyne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Newcastle_upon_Tyne

    In 1762 the Maling pottery was founded in Sunderland by French Huguenots, but transferred to Newcastle in 1817. A factory was built in the Ouseburn area of the city. The factory was rebuilt twice, finally occupying a 14-acre (57,000 m 2 ) site that was claimed to be the biggest pottery in the world and which had its own railway station.

  4. Laing Art Gallery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laing_Art_Gallery

    The gallery collection contains paintings, watercolours and decorative historical objects, including Newcastle silver. [3] In the early 1880s, Newcastle was a major glass producer in the world and enamelled glasses by William Beilby [ 4 ] are on view along with ceramics (including Maling pottery ), and diverse contemporary works by emerging UK ...

  5. Lucien Boullemier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucien_Boullemier

    On his return to England, Boullemier worked at Mintons factory and then at the Soho Pottery in Cobridge before being recruited by C.T. Maling of Newcastle upon Tyne to take charge of their decorating department. Until 1926, he had been painting quite high-class porcelain, and he introduced a range of more glamorous designs into the mass-market ...

  6. North East Coast Exhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_East_Coast_Exhibition

    The North East Coast Exhibition was a world's fair held in Newcastle, Tyne and Wear and ran from May to October 1929. [1] Held five years after the British Empire Exhibition in Wembley Park, London, and at the start of the Great Depression the event was held to encourage local heavy industry.

  7. Norman Carling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Carling

    Norman Carling (1902–1971) was an English designer/modeller in ceramics, who created a large number of Art Deco models and joined Maling pottery in 1935 from the firm of A.J. Wilkinson, a company which also employed Clarice Cliff. He was responsible for Maling's classic 1930s art deco design called "Blossom Time". [1]

  8. North Shields Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Shields_Pottery

    North Shields Pottery was an English pottery manufacturer that created earthenware ceramics from circa 1814 to circa 1913 under a succession of owners and company names. Collingwood & Beall Jug The company was first established at the Low Lights, North Shields , in c.1814 [ 1 ] possibly by Collingwood & Beall.

  9. Robert Charles Bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Charles_Bell

    The Building Medalets Of Kempson And Skidmore 1796-1797 – Frank Graham, Newcastle upon Tyne, 1978. ISBN 978-0859831055. Maling And Other Tyneside Pottery – Shire Publications, 1986. ISBN 978-0852637920. Political And Commemorative Pieces Simulating Tradesmen's Tokens 1770-1802- ?, Felixstowe, 1987.