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Son William, continued potting apparently working for several potters until he returned to the original factory 1824-1829 to produce again in the Turner name. His marriage to Elizabeth Wright was 9 November 1799. His bust, by George Ray, is in Stoke-on-Trent City Museum. [6]
William Turner (1762–1835), one of the English Turner family of potters; see Turner (potters) J. M. W. Turner (William Turner, 1775–1851), major English Romantic landscape painter, watercolourist and printmaker; William Turner (painter) (1789–1862), English watercolour painter from Oxford; William Greene Turner (1833–1917), American ...
Other sources also attribute the invention of ironstone to William Turner of Longton, [17] and Josiah Spode [18] who is known to have been producing ironstone ware by 1805, "which he exported in immense quantities to France and other countries". [19] The popularity of Spode's ironstone surpassed the traditional faience pottery in France. [18]
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Turner (potters), John, and his sons John and William, a family active in that trade in England 1756–1829 C. Turner Joy (1895–1956), U.S. Navy Admiral in World War II and the Korean War References
Thomas Turner (1749 – February 1809) was an English potter. He was the lessee of the celebrated Salopian porcelain company, or Caughley manufactory, during the later decades of the 18th century. He is not to be confused with the potter John Turner (1737-1787) and his family, of Lane End, Staffordshire, who were active in the same period.
Prince William may not have had a run in with Voldemort, but he’s still got a lightning scar badge of honor. The royal, 41, opened up about his Harry Potter-like scar while visiting Cardiff ...
Turner's paired piece titled Shade and Darkness – The Evening of the Deluge was also exhibited in 1843. In this piece as well as The Morning After the Deluge, Turner makes no attempt to mirror the scene of the flood in its naturality. [3] Fallacies of Hope is a poem that Turner supposedly wrote to parallel the two paintings. [5]