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merchant David McBirney. In setting up a pottery business, Bloomfield managed to get a railway line built to
Belleek so that coal could be delivered with which to fire kilns. Building started on the pottery in 1858. Initially starting with domestic products, it wasn't until 1863 that small amounts of
187:-born US-based George G. Moore remains the owner, though the company is run locally by four directors. Since then Belleek Pottery has expanded its factory space, acquisitions of other companies, staff and turnover. Subsidiary companies now include Galway Crystal,
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The artist and poet Eugene
Sheerin worked at Belleek Pottery in the late 19th century. A Belleek dish with a reproduction of his painting "Innocence" (1879) is on display at the Royal Victoria & Albert museum London.
152:. Master craftsmen Frederick Slater moved from England to Belleek in 1893 and by 1920 high quality porcelain was becoming the mainstay of the business. The company struggled throughout the
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gave financial assistance to the company and installed Roger
Troughton as the Managing Director. The following year Troughton made a successful bid for the sale of the company. In 1988,
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After the Second World War, Belleek
Pottery stopped production of earthenware. The Pottery began the change from coal fired kilns to electric powered kilns from 1952. In 1983 the
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in the
Belleek region began around 1849, after John Caldwell Bloomfield inherited his father's estate. Seeking to provide employment for his tenants, who had been affected by the
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the Parian ware for which
Belleek is famous for to this day, was successfully produced. By 1865, the prestige of the company had increased enough that its market included
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The
Material Culture Of Tableware Staffordshire Pottery And American Values.' J. Morgan Zarucchi. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2018. Pg. 33
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that is characterised by its thinness, slightly iridescent surface and body formulated with a significant proportion of
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and
Donegal Parian China. It employs more than six hundred people and has an annual turnover of around £30 million.
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The original owners had all died by 1884, and a local group of investors acquired the concern and named it
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175:-based Powerscreen International bought the company, and opened a visitor centre the following year.
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Dictionary of
Ceramics (3rd Edition) Edited by Dodd, A. Murfin, D. Institute of Materials. 1994.
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Works by
Belleck Pottery in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
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Dessert stand, 1857–1871, Belleek Porcelain Factory V&A Museum no. 3886-1901
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According to their own website, annual production is more than 100,000 pieces.
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239:'Illustrated Catalogue Of Belleek Parian China.' Belleek Pottery. 1949
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340:www.belleek.com – Official Belleek Pottery website
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183:The company changed ownership again in 1990.
144:Belleek pottery showing common shamrock motif
380:Manufacturing companies established in 1857
360:Ceramics manufacturers of Northern Ireland
198:Hand building a piece of Belleek porcelain
160:World Wars, and concentrated on producing
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162:earthenware
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354:Categories
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291:Innocence
173:Dungannon
98:Australia
34:porcelain
325:About us
272:Archived
206:See also
126:nobility
124:and the
299:1 April
185:Dundalk
110:Ireland
106:England
77:Pottery
64:History
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158:Second
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