George Jones English Majolica Chestnut Leaf Plate / Dish from 1860s
George Jones, English majolica chestnut leaf plate or dish. It measures 9'' in diameter and bears early hallmarks, which allow us to date this plate as made between 1866 and 1873, as shown and as explained below. Majolica produced by George Jones rivals that of Minton and Wedgwood in both design and workmanship. After a 7 year apprenticeship with Minton, which he finished in 184, he worked as a traveling salesman for Wedgwood. By 1850 he had established himself as a successful china merchant in Stoke-on-Trent. It was not until 1862 that George Jones entered the pottery manufacturing business with the acquisition of the Bridge works. In 1864, Jones purchased parcels of land from Colin Minton Campbell of the Minton factory for construction of the Trent Potteries, which was completed in late 1865. It was in this new and efficient pottery works that George Jones commenced production of majolica in 1866. George Jones won a medal at the Paris Exhibition in 1867 and received acclaim at exhib