Price & Kensington.
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Price & Kensington Pottery was built around 1830 and the current bottle oven was once one of seven on the site, by 1851 the Davenport family aqcuired the site and expanded it to be the largest manufacturer of china and earthen wear in the country and was granted a royal appointment.
In the 1930`s Arthur Wood & Son took over the site after purchasing Price Brothers and renamed the site Price & Kensington.
The ovens where last used in the 1960`s, the bottle oven recieved a heritage lottery fund grant to preserve it back in 2004.
The bottle kiln here at Price & Kensington is the only one remaining from the original seven that once occupied the site.
As for the rest of the site, it is in various states of disrepair and decay, some sections are being what looks like restored whilst other sections are being left to rot.
There are a few mixing tanks still left on the lower levels of the pottery but apart from that there is nothing else worth looking at.
Upstairs is pretty much the same with only a few of the rooms worth looking in.
At the rear of the pottery on the top floor there are two rooms that look pretty much untouched, still with the original casts and moulds in situ.
The adjacent room is filled from the floor to the ceiling with plates of various sizes and shapes in what looks like the original wooden storage racks where the unfinished products awaited to be painted or glazed.
With the bottle kiln at the entrance to the site recieving a lottery grant to restore it, it is also possible that the rest of the pottery may be restored too at some point.
Visited with Storm whilst we was looking for possible sites around Burslem to explore, but having no joy we decided to explore this place.
Compared to Royal Doulton the pottery is quite small in comparison but still holds some unique features and still has pottery and earthen wear still in situ unlike Doultons.
We spent around an hour inside and covered every inch of the place as well as inspecting all the plates, moulds and casts.
The front of the site does have a gift shop still selling pottery but does not allow visitors to the derelict section we explored.
Date : June 2007 : Location : Stoke-On-Trent : Explorers : Havoc : Storm









