A rare frosted pressed glass swan planter / posy bearing a date registry lozenge for 21 December 1874 – Parcel 4. 7 inches long by approximately 3˝ inches tall.
This corresponds to registered design number 288015, registered by Jane Webb and Joseph Hammond, trading as the executors of the late Joseph Webb, Stourbridge.
Though I have only ever seen this single marked example of a Jane Webb &c swan, I suppose the same design could have been produced in several sizes. Has anyone else ever seen a marked one in a different size, please?
Joseph Webb purchased the Coalbourn Hill Glass Works, Wordsley in 1850 (having previously been in business with his cousin Edward). He died on 1 May 1869, aged 56. There's a whole chapter on the Coalbourn Hill Glass Works from 1691 to 2000 in Jason Ellis's 'Glassmakers of Stourbridge and Dudley 1612-2002' (ISBN 1401067999), and lots of biographical details about the Joseph Webb connection from 1850 to 1892:
When his executors (Jane Webb, Joseph's wife, and Joseph Hammond, Jane's brother) took over (because his 2 sons, Henry Fitzroy and Joseph Junior were still minors) the business had a stock over over 234,000 items, of which over 140,000 were pressed. Most of the stock was tableware, from knife rests to decanters. A few hundred lamps plus a thousand presed miners lamps, but virtually no ornamental glass. There were 180 moulds, one stopper shop and three cutting shops, with a total of 56 frames. Joseph Hammond had previously run a cutting shop at Dennis, either as a partner or tenant of his brother-in-law, Richard Webb. Joseph Hammond's management proved not to be successful, and the business absorbed much of Jane Webb's assets. Hammond was eventually forced out, and on 15 January 1881 it was announced that he was now wholly unconnected with the business, which was to be carried on by Mrs Jane Webb and HF Webb with assistance from Joseph Webb Jr. and Benjamin Robinson. Shortly afterwards, Joseph Jr. renounced all interests in his father's estate and emigrated to Philadelphia, US in 1881 where he worked for the Phoenix Glass Company.
From that time on, pressed glass production was gradually phased out in favour of more ornamental glassware, including chandeliers and incredibly ostentatious cut glass furniture to rival that of Osler (much of which went to wealthy Indian customers). A downturn in trade brought an end to the company in 1886. The works and adjoining house were put up for sale in January 1886 but failed to attract a single bid. THE MOULDS THAT JOSEPH WEBB AND HIS SUCCESSORS HAD USED TO PRODUCE PRESSED GLASS WERE SOLD TO EDWARD MOORE [my emphasis].
Henry Fitzroy Webb became a commercial traveller in the glass trade.
Unable to sell the works, Jane Webb leased it to Thomas Mitchell from 14 September 1887 for 14 years. Jane Webb died on 25 May 1899. Page 305 (plates 316 and 317) of Charles Hajdamach’s “British Glass 1800-1914” shows two pages of designs for pressed glass by Edward Moore published in the Pottery Gazette 1 December 1888. Plate 317 shows 2 sizes of glass swan planters (a small one, #959, and a larger one, #960). Their design is so similar to the registered Jane Webb &c. swan planter to make me think that there is an extremely strong chance that the moulds for the Moore swans came originally from the Joseph / Jane Webb sale.
Other registered designs from Joseph Webb were discussed at
http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,46735.msg265784.html#msg265784and some of those appear in the 1888 Edward Moore catalogue.
Interestingly, GMB topic
http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,54633.new.html#newdraws some comparisons between some of the flower troughs in the 1888 Edward Moore catalogue and those shown in the 1907 Meisenthal catalogue at
http://www.glas-musterbuch.de/Meisenthal-1907.124+B6YmFja1BJRD0xMjQmcHJvZHVjdElEPTU1NjgmcGlkX3Byb2R1Y3Q9MTI0JmRldGFpbD0_.0.htmlSure enough, the 1907 Meisenthal shows a swan planter #2515 (though in truth, the arrangement of the wings on the Meisenthal swan are more like those in the Burtles, Tate & Co. swans RD 20086 of 8 January 1885 than those of the Webb / Moore swans). Perhaps the Meisenthal mould-purchasers came on regular shopping trips to England following glassworks closures?
Fred.