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| | Pottery Adfunk Internet Solutions Article |
 | | Soon red stoneware, though never mass-produced, was added to the repertoire of many potteries and achieved a peak of excellence and popularity in the 1750s-60s, after which its manufacture spread to Yorkshire and eventually petered out at the end of the century. |
 | | Although slightly differing fragments were also found at the neighbouring pottery site at Fenton Low, this little teapot with metal replacement lid, was identified from Whieldon fragments already in the V&A and purchased by the Museum in 1951 for £8 a hundredth or less of its present value. |
 | | First, Enoch Wood was the greatest living expert on Staffordshire pottery, and, secondly, his father Aaron Wood (the famous block maker) had been apprenticed to Thomas Wedgwood of the Big House, Burslem, the major maker of white salt-glaze. |
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