Figure 37 Mug, probably Bristol,
ca. 1915. Whiteware. H. 4 7/8". Whiteware pint mug with mocha decoration
in an unusual diagnostic color. The broad slip band on mugs of this period
is usually in the tan- to olive-colored range. The blue and black bands
are standard, though the sequence may vary from maker to maker. In this
case, the manufacturer complied with prevailing English law requiring vessels
of specific capacity to be so marked and verified by the weights and measures
oYcials. The mark is sandblasted through the glaze and reads gr 490,
followed by either a 5 or an s. The gr
signifies that George V (19101936) or George VI (19361952) was
on the throne; undoubtedly it was the former, inasmuch as most mocha production
had stopped by the 1920s. The 490 represents the Weights and
Measures District of Bristol City. Above the verification mark is the printed
mark of the Bell Hotel, Radstock, whose bar this mug was made for. Radstock
is a small town south of the cathedral city of Wells and southeast of Bristol.
Radstock was either within the Weights and Measures District of Bristol
City or the verification took place at the factory. |