Bridge Pottery (Jericho Pottery)
Bridge Pottery (Jericho Pottery)
HER Number
17569
District
Sunderland
Site Name
Bridge Pottery (Jericho Pottery)
Place
Monkwearmouth
Map Sheet
NZ35NE
Class
Industrial
Site Type: Broad
Pottery Manufacturing Site
Site Type: Specific
Pottery Works
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
Two unnamed buildings are partially drawn on John Rennie's 1826 Map of Sunderland, presumably under construction at the time of the survey. Robson's map of 1827 shows the pottery complex near to completion. The final layout is shown on Stephenson's 1829 Map of Sunderland. Bridge Pottery, known locally as Jericho Pottery, was a small concern manufacturing brownware. It is thought to have been built for Samuel Moore, who had bought Southwick Pottery around 1803 and changed its name to Wear Pottery. Alternatively Bridge Pottery could have been built for William Barker, earthenware manufacturer from Monkwearmouth, listed in Parson's Directory of 1827. The pottery chiefly produced brown glazed ware including bread mugs, stew dishes, flower pots and candlesticks and glazed white pots. The firm was contracted to the government to produce brownware. They exported pottery for the dairy market in Denmark and produced a range of goods for the home market, chiefly sold in the south of England. By 1861 the Bridge Pottery had been taken over by R.T. Wilkinson and leased to Messrs. Glaholm and Robson. It was later taken over by John Patterson. Around 1896 Bridge Pottery was sold to J.W. Snowdon & Co. Production moved to the nearby Sheepfolds Pottery (HER 2752) in 1900.
Easting
439530
Northing
557550
Grid Reference
NZ439530557550
Sources
Northern Archaeological Associates, 2017, Sheepfolds, Sunderland - Archaeological Desk Based Assessment, Building Recording and Geological Assessment; John Rennie, 1826, Map of Sunderland; John Wood, 1817, Plan of Sunderland, Bishopwearmouth and Monk Wearmouth; Robson, 1827, Map of Sunderland; C Baker, 1984, Sunderland Pottery, p 13; W Parsons and W White, 1827, History, Directory and Gazetteer of the Counties of Durham and Northumberland, p 359; J.T. Shaw, 1973, The Potteries of Sunderland and District; Sunderland Echo 16th October 1883, advertisement (British Newspaper Archive); Northern Archaeological Associates, 2017, Archaeological Evaluation Interim Report - Sheepfolds, Monkwearmouth, Sunderland; Northern Archaeological Associates, 2018, Sheepfolds, Monkwearmouth: Archaeological monitoring report;