Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
to
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
328
219
195
128
Creator: Victoria Pottery Company
A Victoria Pottery Majolica Cobalt Basketweave Sardine Box, English, ca. 1883
By Victoria Pottery Company
Located in Banner Elk, NC
A Rare Victoria Pottery Company Majolica Sardine Box with five sardines on green glazed lotus pads and other foliage, trimmed in yellow bamboo with green shoots, the body and integra...
Category
1880s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Related Items
Pair of 19th Century English Majolica Pickles Pitchers
Located in Austin, TX
Amusing pair of Victorian Majolica pickles pitchers signed dated with the English mark June 7th 1871.
Category
1870s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica, Ceramic, Faience
Antique Blue Green Ceramic German Basketweave Majolica Plate, Zell Baden, 1900s
Located in Oklahoma City, OK
A beautiful Art Nouveau majolica plate with basketweave texture and blackberry and cherry fruits. This antique piece was created in the 1900...
Category
Early 1900s German Art Nouveau Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic, Paint
19th Century English Minton Majolica Oyster Plates Pair
By Minton
Located in Winter Park, FL
A pair of late 19th Century English Minton Majolica oyster plates with six oyster wells and a large well for crackers surrounding a center well for sauce. Luminous cream and pink gla...
Category
Late 19th Century English Late Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Pair of 19th Century English Majolica Leaf Plates
Located in High Point, NC
Pair of 19th century majolica leaf plates in rich green glaze. the border of the plates is a basketweave pattern, with the center being overlapping leaves. These are lovely and wou...
Category
19th Century English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic
Partridge Majolica Game Pie Dish Made by George Jones, Ca. 1867
By George Jones
Located in Fort Lauderdale, FL
A majolica game pie dish designed by George Jones circa 1867-1869 in the ‘Partridge’ shape. The game pie dish is decorated with a lovely turquoi...
Category
1860s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Earthenware, Majolica, Pottery
English Victorian Majolica Game Pie Dish Made by Minton & Co.
By Minton
Located in Fort Lauderdale, FL
A majolica game pie dish made by Minton & Co. in 1874. The dish takes the form of a wicker basket and is covered with oak leaves, acorns, vines,...
Category
1870s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Earthenware, Majolica, Pottery
19th Century English Majolica Oyster Plate Signed Minton
By Minton
Located in Winter Park, FL
A good English Majolica plate, dated 1885 and marked Minton, with turquoise and cobalt blue oyster plate with a central well surrounded by small ochre flowers. Six small and one larg...
Category
Late 19th Century English Late Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Italian Majolica Pottery Daisy Plate
By Mottahedeh
Located in Charleston, SC
Handpainted majolica pottery daisy plates provide a charming presentation for your food or use as a catchall or hang it on the wall!
Category
1960s Italian Other Vintage Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic, Paint
Antique English Majolica Blackberry & Basketweave Plate
Located in Pearland, TX
A lovely antique 19th-Century English majolica blackberry vine plate. This charming plate is hand painted with blackberries and leaves on a cream b...
Category
Late 19th Century English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic, Majolica
English Majolica Strawberries Server with Fruits, circa 1890
Located in Austin, TX
Large English Majolica begonia leaf decorated with strawberries and cherries, circa 1890.
Category
1890s British Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic, Faience
19thc Cobalt Blue Painted Floral Pottery Jug
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Cobalt blue painted pottery decorated floral stoneware handled jug. Measures: 9.5” high, 7” diameter.
Category
19th Century American Adirondack Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Pottery
Wedgwood Majolica Sardinia Sardine Box
By Wedgwood
Located in Chelmsford, Essex
Wedgwood Majolica sardine box which features a fishing boat named 'SARDINIA', with fish in nets at either end. An anchor forms the handle. Colouration: brown, blue, grey, are predomi...
Category
1880s Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Previously Available Items
Victoria Pottery 'VPC' Majolica Plate English, circa 1875
By Victoria Pottery Company
Located in Banner Elk, NC
Victoria Pottery (VPC) Majolica plate 8.75-ins, English, circa 1875, with simulated bamboo edging, colorful bamboo shoots, on a vivid turquoise basket-weave ground. VPC painted pattern mark 'M110' to reverse.
Provenance: From the Estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Sotheby's New York, April 22-25, 1999, Sale number 7293, Lot number 956 (color illustration p. 369).
For over 28 years we have been among the Nation’s preeminent specialists in fine antique majolica.
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt Whitney (1908-1999), the widow of John Hay "Jock" Whitney and the first wife of James Roosevelt II, the eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was one of the three glamorous Cushing sisters of Boston. Married at twenty-two, she was FDR's clear favorite during the White House years, where she often stood in as a highly competent, enthusiastic and poised Hostess, a job which the first lady deplored. Betsey’s social-climbing mother preened her three daughters from birth to make socially and financially advantageous marriages. And that they did. Her elder sister, Mary (Minnie), married Vincent Astor, and her younger sister, Barbara, whom they called 'Babe' form a young age, married Standard Oil heir, Stanley Mortimer, Jr., and after divorcing him, married William S. Paley, founder of the CBS television network (Babe Paley). These glittering doyennes of New York and international society defined taste, what was in and what wasn't, for thirty years.
After divorcing James Roosevelt in 1940, Betsey married Jock Whitney on March 1, 1942 in an informal family-only ceremony held at her mother’s New York apartment on East 86th Street. She was 33 and he was 37. She had two young daughters, Sara and Kate; he had no children from his previous marriage. As one of the wealthiest men in the world throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, Jock achieved his great fortune through equal parts inheritance, business acumen and flat-out good luck. His concerns were as vast and varied as they are interesting; for example, in 1933 he acquired a 15% interest in Technicolor Corporation, and in 1942 when David O. Selznick liquidated his company for tax reasons, and sold his share in gone with the wind to his business partner, Jock Whitney, for $500,000, who in turn sold it on to MGM for $2.8 million, so that the studio owned the film outright. In 1946, he founded J.H. Whitney & Company, the oldest venture capital firm in the U.S.
In 1949, after eight years of marriage, he adopted Betsey’s two daughters from her previous marriage to James Roosevelt and the girls’ names were changed to Whitney.
Jock was appointed by Dwight D. Eisenhower as Ambassador to Great Britain and the couple moved to London in 1957 for four years, taking with them some 150 of their favorite paintings, all of them masterpieces. Since their marriage in 1942, the couple had set about collecting scores of nearly priceless paintings and other significant works decorative art, the finest antique furniture, tapestries, porcelains, ceramics, and Majolica. During their tenure in London, both Ambassador and Mrs. Whitney became close to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, who, in a departure from the usual procedure, addressed them by their first names.
After Betsey Whitney’s death in 1999, their collections were consigned to Sotheby’s New York. Items were removed directly from their many homes, a quadruplex at Beekman...
Category
1870s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Victoria Pottery Company ceramics for sale on 1stDibs.
Victoria Pottery Company ceramics are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of majolica and are designed with extraordinary care. Many of the original ceramics by Victoria Pottery Company were created in the Victorian style in united kingdom during the 19th century. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider ceramics by Minton, Doulton Burslem, and Joseph Holdcroft. Prices for Victoria Pottery Company ceramics can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $2,485 and can go as high as $2,485, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $2,485.