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01 August 2020

Spode and 'an accomplished violinist'

Violin c1780
So what has a violinist got to do with Spode? Quite a lot! Read on...

In his history* of the Adams potting family, Percy Adams wrote:

'When any festivities were held at the Bank House [the Adams' home in Bagnall, Staffordshire], Josiah Spode of Stoke (afterwards the famous potter) would always be invited to be one of the musicians, as he was an accomplished violinist. The two succeeding generations of the Adams and Spode families were intimate friends.'
Josiah Spode I, National Portrait Gallery
The particular Josiah Spode mentioned by Adams in the above extract is the one we now know as Josiah Spode I (1733-1797). In his lifetime the numbers at the end of the names were not used to differentiate between the Spodes. But now it helps us to know who was who of the many Josiah Spodes. In the Spodes' lifetime they would use a suffix of Elder or Younger, for example.
'Festivities' and violinist
Stoke to Bagnall - a couple of hours walk each way

How young Spode I made his way from Stoke, where he lived, to Bagnall, to play his violin at the 'festivities', we do not know. But most likely on foot or perhaps hitching a ride on a cart.
Bagnall in its Staffordshire Moorlands setting

Peter Roden** says:

'No one seems to have attached any significance to this talent in relation to his [Josiah Spode I] other obvious talent in the pottery industry.

Learning to play the violin is not something that one often learns in later life, and in Spode’s case, the suggestion [from Adams' writing] is that he had developed a local reputation as a violinist before he became famous as a potter. Is it not relevant to consider who might have taught him - after all, having access to violins is not something that one normally associates with eighteenth century paupers?

Whilst we are never likely to know who actually taught him, or gave him his first access to a musical instrument, we can note that (a) it would have been someone cultured, and (b) it is possible that his musical abilities may have provided his initial introduction to influential potters in his childhood.'

Peter Roden's research, then, raises intriguing questions about the early life and range of skills of the famous potter and founder of the Spode company. It is also recorded elsewhere that Spode I with his violin was for hire and played for money.

I sometimes feel that, born into poverty and the 'man of the family' from the age of 6, he was determined never again to be poor. From a young age he worked hard in the fledgling pottery industry, made money from his accomplished violin playing (you could say he had another  string to his bow!), married Ellen Finley, a woman running her own successful little haberdashery business, and juggled mortgages and pottery partnerships to be financially safe. It wasn't until he was in his forties, in 1776, that he was able to buy his own factory with his son Josiah Spode II. It would seem he had backup plans if anything drastically failed and was determined to be financially sound.
Detail of an haberdasher's trade card (London)
So there we have it, Josiah Spode I not just a master potter but also 'an accomplished violinist'.
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* 'A history of the Adams family of North Staffordshire, & of their connection with the development of the potteries, with numerous pedigree charts & notes on allied families' by P. L. Adams.

**This blogpost is based on detailed research by Peter Roden. The subject has always fascinated me and it is wonderful to find out more about the founder of the Spode company from this research. As ever, I thank Peter for sharing his decades of Spode family research with me. I couldn't do this blog without his work. I am in awe of the details and new Spode family (and Spode company) history he discovered over the years.

For more information enjoy consulting:

'Josiah Spode (1733-1797): his formative influences and the various Potworks associated with him' is available to consult at the Spode archive. The publisher's website, the Northern Ceramic Society, can be found by clicking NCS. Click here for my booklist with more details about Roden's publications.