Willets Belleek vase likely embellished by a hobbyist
Q: I read about your expertise on Belleek Willets. I recently acquired a beautiful vase and I am wondering if my piece might have value and who the artist might have been.
A: “Expertise” is a strong word we try to avoid. We prefer seeing ourselves as research specialists with a lot of practical experience in the field of art and antiques that helps us decode what we uncover in our investigations.
“Belleek” (“beal leice” in Gaelic, meaning “flagstone ford”) is the name of an Irish village where a special type of china was developed on the estate of John Caldwell Bloomfield. During Ireland’s Great Famine (1845-49), Bloomfield’s Castle Caldwell estate in County Fermanagh was run down and Bloomfield’s tenants were in a bad way.
Bloomfield was more interested in mineralogy than agriculture. And upon exploring his property, he soon found feldspar and kaolin, the ingredients for making porcelain. He found a place on the nearby River Erne, where the rapidly flowing river would power a mill. Before long, porcelain was made.
The new pottery was financed by David McBirney and managed by Robert William Armstrong from the Worcester Royal Porcelain Works. It is said that pottery was made at Belleek as early as 1849.
But Belleek porcelain production, which was formulated by English potter William Henry Goss, did not begin until about 1863. The product was a white porcelain covered with an iridescent glaze. Belleek was a big
success and is in business to this day.
The Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876 featured a large display of Irish Belleek wares that completely overshadowed anything made in the United States at the time. John Brewer of Trenton, New Jersey’s Ott and Brewer Pottery saw the Belleek and thought his company could produce the same type of wares.
Ott and Brewer hired Englishmen William Bromley Jr. and Sr. to help achieve the goal. Bromley Sr. had worked with William Henry Goss. And in late 1883 or 1884 they produced the first American Belleek.
Another company established in Trenton in 1879 was the Willets Manufacturing Company. Initially it made such things as sanitary wares and white pottery that was sometimes decorated. But like Ott and Brewer, Willets wanted to make fine porcelain wares and in
1884 they hired Bromley Sr. to teach them how.
The result was “Willets Belleek,” which was made between 1885 and 1909. Willets decorated a lot of its Belleek in-house, but they also sold vast quantities of undecorated blanks to china painters. China painting was a big hobby in the U.S. at the time.
We believe the vase in today’s question was embellished by a hobbyist. The insurance replacement value of the piece is $250-$350.
Helaine Fendelman and
Joe Rosson have written a number of books on antiques. Do you have an item you’d like to know more about? Contact them at Joe Rosson, 2504 Seymour Ave., Knoxville, TN 37917, or email them at treasures@knology.net. If you’d like your question to be considered for their column, include a high-resolution photo of the subject, which must be in focus, with your inquiry.