Bankruptcy did not bring Thomas Bond’s story to an end. Beginning again in 1819, he rebuilt his life as a brickmaker, establishing a successful business in Handsacre that supported his growing family for many years. This concluding article follows Bond’s remarkable recovery after financial ruin, revealing how determination and enterprise enabled one of Armitage’s earliest industrial pioneers to secure a lasting place in the parish’s history.
Tag: Armitage
Thomas Bond Part 2 – maltster, brickmaker, potter and bankrupt
Imprisonment for debt might have ended Thomas Bond’s ambitions, but instead it marked the beginning of a determined attempt to rebuild his fortunes. Returning to Armitage, he revived his malting and brickmaking businesses while expanding into pottery manufacture. Despite energy and enterprise, financial pressures continued to mount, culminating in bankruptcy. This second part of Bond’s story reveals both the risks of early nineteenth-century business and the uncertain beginnings of Armitage’s pottery industry.
The founding of Armitage potbank
For decades the origins of Armitage Pottery appeared well understood. Yet newly available documents, forgotten newspaper reports and surviving estate records reveal a more complicated picture. By piecing together the evidence, this article explores who established the pottery, how it developed and why its earliest history has been misunderstood.
Thomas Bond Part 1 – maltster, brickmaker, potter and gaolbird
Thomas Bond is generally credited with founding Armitage’s first pottery, but his story began long before pottery became his livelihood. Maltster, brickmaker, canal carrier and entrepreneur, he pursued a succession of ambitious ventures while navigating debt, failed partnerships and imprisonment. Drawing on newly available documentary evidence, this article explores the remarkable life of the man whose enterprise marked the beginning of Armitage’s pottery industry.
The pre-fabs
Armitage’s prefabs were intended to last only a few years, yet for many families they became cherished homes for decades. This article traces their origins in Britain’s post-war housing crisis, the heated local debates over their allocation, and the remarkable community that grew around them. It also reveals how the estate became the setting for an innovative stock allotment scheme that helped families cope with rationing and food shortages.
The oldest item in the village
Standing just inside St. John the Baptist Church is probably the oldest surviving object in Armitage-with-Handsacre. Carved in the early twelfth century, the Norman font is covered with mysterious figures whose meaning has intrigued visitors for generations. This article explores its history, craftsmanship and symbolism, and asks whether it even preserves an early piece of Norman political propaganda.
Armitage School Logbook 1917
The 1917 logbook of Armitage Senior School provides a remarkable diary of everyday life during the First World War. Through the headmaster’s own words, this article follows outbreaks of disease, harvest holidays, school gardening, inspections, staffing changes and children’s contributions to the war effort. Together these daily entries offer an unusually vivid picture of how a village school adapted to the challenges of wartime Britain.
Armitage Ware colour samples
When Armitage introduced the world’s first coloured sanitary ware in 1927, it transformed bathroom design. Using rare surviving colour samples, this article traces the evolution of the company’s distinctive colour range, explains how salesmen used these samples to market Armitage products, and explores the changing fashions that shaped British bathrooms from the 1930s onwards.
The Coronation Carnival of 1937
How did Armitage and Handsacre celebrate the Coronation of George VI in 1937? Drawing on committee records, newspaper reports and surviving invoices, this article recreates a remarkable day of carnival processions, fancy dress, races, teas, torchlight parades and a giant bonfire. It also reveals the extraordinary planning behind the celebrations and offers a vivid glimpse of community life in the parish before the Second World War.
A shipwreck find
When divers explored the wreck of the Josephine Willis in the English Channel, they uncovered an extraordinary cargo of pottery destined for New Zealand—including a beautifully decorated water closet made at Armitage in the 1850s. The discovery sheds new light on Robert Hedderwick Penman, his short-lived pottery partnership and the company’s early export trade.
