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Christine
Longworth
Curator of British & European Antiquities
National Museums Liverpool
William Brown Street
Liverpool
L3 8EN
UK
Tel: 0151 478 4311
The town of Buckley, in Flintshire, North Wales, has been associated with the production of pottery for at least 600 years. A series of excavations and field surveys have identified 19 pottery production sites around Buckley ranging in date from medieval to the closure of the last pottery in 1946. The peak period of production was at the end of the 17th century.
The site of Hancock’s pottery was excavated in 1974-1975 when part of the pottery dump was sampled ahead of road building. This was one of the major production sites in Buckley and operated from 1790-1886. Documentary records show the peak production was in c. 1803 followed by a general decline.
The two major production types were vessels for the lead industry and domestic cooking and storage vessels. The domestic wares were dark glazed and slipware storage vessels, dishes and bowls, black and brown glazed fineware and stoneware.
Davey, P.J. and Longworth, C.M. .The identification of Buckley pottery. Archaeology in Wales 41, 2001, 62-72.
Philpot, Sarah 1978 A study of some pottery from Hancock.s Pottery, Buckley, Clwyd, unpublished thesis. Copy in the archive.
The archive is deposited with National Museums Liverpool (Liverpool Museum). Accession Number 1995.98