A history of bottle design and production

This is the introduction to Rachael’s dissertation:

This dissertation focuses on the question ‘How and Why did the Design and Production of Preston Bottles Change Between 1830 and 1930?’ In order to answer this question the thesis will consider the evolution of the bottle throughout its history but with an emphasis on its most critical developmental phase; the industrial period of the 19th and early 20th centuries. The context of Preston has been chosen as it represents a competitive collecting area in addition to being a typical northern, industrial town in Britain. Preston can therefore be seen as a microcosm of the bottle collector’s world and this dissertation sets out to consider whether Preston followed national trends in bottle design and production or whether it has anything unique and significant to offer the collecting market. Thus this thesis will examine the stoneware bottle from its earliest form with applied and inscribed decoration through to the use of print and paper labels. As stoneware largely gave way to glass in the chronological framework considered, the evolution of the glass bottle will also be relevant. To ascertain why such changes occurred in Preston bottle design and production the following influences will be examined:

• Types of materials and their availability
• Productivity and profitability
• Market and economy
• Social factors
• Influence of individuals

The evolution of the bottle is by no means a new area of study but to consider it from a Preston point of view is. Studies have been made of the effects of the Temperance cause on bottle manufacture in Lincoln by Paul Hickman (Paul Hickman, Personal communication, 20 March, 2011). Malcolm Starkie’s studies of Rossendale’s bottles can be found in the research library at Blackburn and include examples of Slab Seal Stoneware similar to those found in Preston (Paul Best, Personal communication, 8 May, 2011). Paul Best is also currently compiling a work on the bottles of Cirencester; which had a population in 1901 of just 8000 (Paul Best, Personal communication, 8 May, 2011). Until now, Preston, due to its sizeable proportions as a Victorian industrial town – (population in 1901 120,000) (Paul Best, Personal communication, 8 May, 2011) has been an area considered too vast to research thoroughly and therefore has been previously neglected as an area of study by any other than those with a passing local interest. Some collectors have attempted to compile lists of companies connected to Preston bottle production. Some have photographed bottles that have passed through their collections, in order to try to record examples for the area, but those are all in private hands and not for public consumption. Therefore, the reader of this dissertation should find an invaluable potted history of bottle evolution alongside information on what is available to collect on a national or local level. For the local Preston bottle enthusiast this thesis should go even further by attempting to ascertain the range of companies connected to bottle production in Preston plus what influenced their design and production techniques; whilst also placing Preston in a national collecting context.

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