Arklow Pottery

Arklow Pottery was a pottery founded in 1934 and formally opened by Seán Lemass (Minister for Industry and Commerce) 29 July 1935 in South Quay, Arklow, County Wicklow, Ireland. The company produced many decorative earthenware goods and general table crockery.

History

Arklow Pottery ran into financial difficulties in the 1970s and was taken over by Japanese tableware company Noritake in 1977. After losses of more than £7.5 million over a 20-year period, the company ceased production in 1998. At its peak the company had employed 480 people.[1][2][3]

There is an Arklow Pottery cup and saucer with Tiger stripes, designed by John French around 1950, held and exhibited by the National Museum of Ireland. Arklow pottery is now closed.[4]

gollark: DNA contains nitrogen.
gollark: <@308493066879369219> If you can make hexagonal biological encoding mechanisms work, you get to name them, Mr "I actually know some biochemistry".
gollark: DNA already has two strands. Six would be twice that.
gollark: * 3x
gollark: Get boring uncool DNA, duct tape six bits together in a hexagon.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.