Examples of this type of glass –

such as the flamboyant “Convolvulus

Vase”, produced in the late 19thc,
have been borrowed from the

Broadfield House
Glass
Museum,

Kingswinford.

Prominent displays of 19thc

Venetian glass include a chandelier

from the Castle Museum,
Nottingham which is being restored

and reassembled especially for the
exhibition. A bowl produced by the

Salviati Company displays another
facet of Venetian imagination. Two

sea-green winged horses rise from
the body of the bowl, which is

formed in the retorti technique with

aventurine added, and is supported

by a stem with applied dolphins.

The bowl still retains the Company’s

label and the price, £3.3.0; it was
bought by Blackburn Museum and

Art Gallery, probably in the 1880s.

Other exhibits come from a number

of museums and galleries
throughout the country including

lesser known collections such as
Manchester Polytechnic and

Wightwick Manor, West Midlands.

The exhibition is a unique

opportunity to see a wide range of
English and Venetian glass of the

19thc. It has been organised by the
Postgraduate Course in Art Gallery

and Museum Studies, University of
Manchester. An illustrated

catalogue will be available from the

Whitworth Art Gallery.

14th March — 10th May

Monday — Saturday, 10 a. m. – 5 p.m.

(Thursday 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.)

KINGSWINFORD
BROADFIELD HOUSE GLASS
MUSEUM

BARNETT LANE

Jobling 1930s Decorative Glass

11th March — 20th April
Tuesday — Friday, 2-5 p.m.;

Saturday, 10 am. – 1 p.m., 2-5 p.m.

Sunday, 2-5 p.m.

LONDON

ASPECTS GALLERY

3-5 WHITFIELD STREET

Six Landscapes in Glass

Wendy Ramshaw is Britain’s
premier jeweller in precious metals.

Her diverse interests prompted
Martin Hunt of the Royal College of

Art
Glass
Department, to invite her

to take a year’s residency to explore
the medium

of glass as a decorative

and wearable object. Funding was
assisted by the Crafts Council. The

outstanding results of this
exploration form this exhibition.

Balanced between the wearable

and the sculptural, these works

appeal to the utilitarian and the

abstract Collector. The six
landscapes include three

necklaces, the classic, the

geometric and the shard, a helmet, a
collection of pins and a jewellery

box. The Pin Landscape and the

Jewellery Box can be dismantled to

be worn as individual items or can

be viewed complete as glass

sculptures. Although it is unlikely
that Wendy Ramshaw will work in

glass after this residency, the
experience has added a richness to

her palette and resulted in a

significant contribution to ideas on
glass as a decorative medium.

1st — 6th April
Monday — Saturday, 9 am. – 5 p.m.

ELLASTONE
DERBYSHIRE

YEW TREE GALLERY

“Light Fantastic”
Ban

y Cullen — hot and cold glass

with porcelain by Barry Guppy,
Derek Clarkson, David Morris and

paintings on glass by
Frances

Alcock.

8th April

18th May

()
) LOCe,

The newsletter of the
Glass Association
Registered as a Charity No. 326602

Chairman:
Anthony Waugh

Hon. Secretary:
Roger Dodsworth

Editor:

Charles Ha)clamach

Address for correspondence:
Broadfield House Glass Museum.

Barnett Lane, Kingswinford,
West Midlands DY6 9QA

Tel 0384 273011

ISSN 0265 9654
Printed by Jones & Palmer Ltd., Birmingham

Cover Illustration
Bowl, latticimb and aventurine, by

Salviati & Co. c1865 — 1880
Collection of Blackburn Museum

and Art Gallery.
One of the star attractions at the

Venetian glass exhibition in

Manchester.

SPONSOR
This issue is published with the aid

of a financial contribution from the

Broadfield House Glass Museum.

Review of the first issue of
`Ceramics’

The much-awaited first issue of
‘Ceramics’, or to give it its subsidiary

title, ‘The International Journal of

Ceramics and Glass’ is now with us

and may be acquired on a

subscription basis published
bi-monthly (6 issues £36; 12 issues

£64; 18 issues £86). In their foreword
the publishers announce that they

“have long been aware of the need
for a specialist magazine in the

English language which caters for

the interest of academics,

collectors, dealers and enthusiasts

throughout the world. Each edition

will feature a particular area of
interest, such as English pottery and

porcelain, European pottery and
porcelain, Oriental ceramics and

glass, while other fields such as
Islamic pottery, Victorian and late

ceramics, studio pottery or

architectural ceramics will also be

covered from time to time”.

The Editor, editorial board and

contributors to the first issue are all
(continued on page 8)

Exhibitions
MANCHESTER

WHITWORTH
ART GALLERY

OXFORD ROAD

Reflections of Venice
The influence of Venetian Glass in

Victorian England 1840-1900.

The 19thc saw a revival of interest in

early Venetian glass in England.
Manufacturers, such as James
Powell of Whitefriars, were

influenced by the 17thc Venetian

originals. Powell produced
table-services in a clear green
glass

reminiscent of the coloured glass of
Venice. His delicate, thinly blown
table-services imitate the
hand-made products of Venice and

provide a contrast to some of the
highly decorated Victorian glass on

display.

Although glass-makers of the Arts

and Crafts movement, like Powell,
emphasised the outline and
proportion of the Venetian originals,
the majority of factories catered for
popular taste by developing pieces

of
highly ornamental glass.

Glass Blowing

From Scenes of

British
Wealth,

in Produce,

Manufactures

and

Commerce,
1825

wca se

The Working Class Movement Library

In their semi-detached house in

Manchester, Edmund and Ruth

Frow have collected over 10,000

books and pamphlets which form
The Working Class Movement

Library. The library represents the

fruit of over thirty years’ collecting.
The Frows spent every holiday

travelling the country in search of

material on the themes of social
reform, the labour movement,

working conditions and feminism.
Since their retirements they have

devoted themselves to the care of
the library, and their love and

enthusiasm for the collection is
reflected in the welcome they give

visitors and the trouble they take to
uncover just what is of interest to

each one from the shelves of books

which line every room. It is a

pleasant experience to visit the
library, (how many library users are

brought cups of coffee by the

librarian as they work at a table in

the corner of his bedroom?) and I

spent a happy day finding out what

books of interest to Glass

Association members are included

in the collection.

A book which would be of great
interest to those studying working

conditions of glass makers is

Abstract Reports & Minutes of the
National Conference of the Glass

Bottle Makers 1893-5,
which covers

wages, terms and conditions of work

and reports of the lockout and strike
in Yorkshire, Lancashire and Dublin

in 1893. This bitter industrial dispute

was caused by a reduction of 3/- per

week in wages, unacceptable work
sharing, unacceptable numbers of

apprentices being taken into the
industry at the expense of

experienced men, and the lack of

quality control on the marbles used

in bottles leading to breakages and
loss of earnings by men paid by

results. Of the 3,300 unionised
journeymen bottle makers and over

400 apprentices only 50 remained at

work at the height of the strike which
Interior of an

Edinburgh
Glasshouse.

From
The Book

of Trades, or

Circle of Useful

Arts,
1841.

lasted 16 weeks in Yorkshire

The

struggle was successful but victory
was hard won, “The result has been

bought at great cost and sacrifice of

domestic comfort, and many empty

stomachs and aching hearts, for

which the manufacturers must for
ever be held responsible

Of

course they ignore and repudiate
this charge and attach the blame

and responsibility to the men, and
especially ‘their leaders’.”

Many books of trades were written

in the late 18th and early 19th

centuries. A number were written

for children and young people,
sometimes in order to give them

guidelines about possible trades in

adult life, but more often as text
books for geography and general

knowledge.
Scenes of British

Wealth, in Produce, Manufactures

and Commerce
was written by the

Rev. I. Taylor in 1825 “for the

Amusement and Instruction of Little
Tarry-at-Home Travellers” and is

peppered with hints on good
behaviour and the proper respect

due to adults which would cause
hilarity among today’s children. The

book takes the form of an account of

a journey around the British Isles

A Glass

Blower. From
The Book of

Trades, or

Library of the

Useful Arts,
1806
taken by two children and their

parents. Papa, in spite of being a

gentleman with no visible

occupation of his own, has an
encyclopaedic knowledge of every
trade and industry including paper

making, cotton weaving, watch

making, japanning and, of course,
glass making. In Newcastle the
family visit one of the sixteen
glasshouses reported to be in

production, and watch glass
blowers at work. In another part of

the
glass
house crown glass for

windows is being made, and at

another plate glass for mirrors. Papa
takes the opportunity to remind his

daughter that only little girls whose
faces had not been spoilt by

“crossness, or vulgar habits” would

see
pretty reflections.
The Book of Trades, or Circle of the

Useful Arts
was published in 1841 as

a text book for the High School of
Glasgow. Its chapter on

glassmaking is illustrated with an

engraving of the interior of a glass

house at Edinburgh with the glass
blowers at various stages of making

a vessel. The descriptions of glass
making processes are as clearly

explained as would be expected in

a text book. Even more detailed is

the information given in
The Useful

Arts and Manufactures of Great

Britain
published by the Society for

Promoting Christian Knowledge

in1848. The anonymous author

describes a visit to the Falcon

Glassworks where “through the
kindness of Mr Pellatt” he was able

to watch workmen “setting a new
pot”, that is replacing a cracked
melting pot with a new one.

Twenty-four men were engaged in

the task, working two or three at a

time. The old pot had become fused

to the floor of the furnace and had to
be broken free with crow bars.
Then, working in the terrible heat

radiating from the opening in the

furnace wall, the men had to
prepare the floor for the new pot” …
for this purpose the most fire-proof

workman was selected; he was
furnished with a kind of shovel, with

a handle fourteen or fifteen feet long,
resting on a roller … A number of

men stood by, each holding a large
kneaded piece of fire-clay — one of

them, as he was directed went up to

the mouth of the opening, and
placing his piece of clay on the

shovel quickly retreated. The clay
was deposited on the bed of the
furnace, and worked quickly with

the spade; and thus piece after
piece was deposited until a

tolerably even bed was produced.”
The new pot was then brought from

the annealing oven and

crow-barred into place. After the

opening was closed with bricks and
clay it was ready to be loaded with

frit.

The materials for making flint glass

required to be heated for at least

forty-eight hours before it was ready

for working. For this reason the

working week was organised with
men working round the clock in six

hour shifts from Monday to

Thursday. On Friday the pots were
refilled and the fire was built up over

the weekend so that the metal was

ready for Monday. “It is to be

regretted that the long-continued

application of heat to the glass-pots
renders it necessary to employ

some of the men on Sunday; but as

the whole of their duty on that day is

simply to watch the furnace, it is so
arranged that the attendance of
each workman one Sunday in four is

all that is required.”

The account of the glass making

processes continues with a

description of bottle making; using a
two-piece mould each bottle took,

we are told, about one minute to
make. The writer also describes the

manufacture of crown glass for

windows. The finished disks of glass

weighed ten or eleven pounds and

were four or five feet in diameter.

Forming a

Glass Vessel.

From British

Manufactures,

by George
Dodd, 1845.

The Glass

Engraver at

Work. From

British

Manufactures,

by George
Dodd, 1845

They were of uniform thickness

except for the “bull’s eye” in the

centre and were sold in crates of

twelve disks.

The manufacture of plate glass is

also described in some detail. The
glass was specially prepared to
minimise bubbles which could flaw

the finished product. When judged
to
be ready it was “poured out or cast

upon tables with perfectly smooth

and level metallic surfaces. The
British Plate Glass Company make

use of an iron table, or plate of
cast-iron, fifteen feet long, nine

wide, and six inches thick. Its weight
is
nearly fourteen tons, it is

supported on castors, and moved
about to the mouths of the different

annealing ovens as the occasion

requires”. The glass was rolled out

with large copper rollers which
extended across the table. Plate

glass was annealed for fifteen days
before being polished with oxide of

iron and water, applied with a

woollen cushion.

The author did not restrict his

concern for the well-being of the

workmen to their Sunday working.
But he believed that the work was

not as unhealthy as might appear to

the outside observer, “the high

temperatures to which the glass

workers are accustomed, does not

appear to have a very injurious
effect … They are subject to coughs

and colds, and in warm weather
describe their work as ‘very

weakening’. But they seem to be
cheerful and contented in their

work; and, when temperate in their
habits, attain the usual age of man.

Many of them are, however,

unfortunately addicted to drinking.

Mr Thacicrah says that individuals

among the most intemperate are

known to take, sometimes, as much

as
two gallons of beer in the day. ‘A

practice like this, though probably

less
injurious than in occupations

where the heat is moderate,
produces disorder of the digestive

organs.’ With the exceptions arising

from
this habit, the men are in good

health”.

George Dodd wrote very

informatively about glassmaking in
his
‘British Manufactures’
(1845) and

in
‘Days at the Factories’
(1843). The

other books I have mentioned are
solely concerned with the

techniques and skills of the
glassmakers but in discussing the

work of the glass engraver Dodd

writes, “This is strictly a branch of

the Fine Arts, and as such places the

engraver on a different level from

the other workmen.” He also makes
reference to the attempts to “diffuse

among workmen a more extensive
knowledge of the Arts of Design”. In

his description of a day at a flint glass

factory Dodd describes decorative

techniques including engraving,

cutting (including of cased glass)

and the method of making sulphides
patented by Apsley Pellatt. “A

medallion or bas-relief,
representing any device whatever,

is moulded in a peculiar kind of clay

capable of resisting the heat of

melted glass; and the medallion is
enclosed between two pieces of soft
glass, or else is introduced into a

cavity in the glass, from whence the

air is afterwards extracted… When finished… the appearance of the

imbedded medallion is singularly

chaste and elegant.” One feature of
Dodd’s day at the factory remains

familiar, “We terminate our visit by a
glance at the elegant show-room”.

The library also holds material on

William Morris.

The library, which is at 1 1 1 Kings
Road, Old Trafford, Manchester

M16 9NU (tel. 061-881 9269) is open

daily. As the library is run from the
Frows’ home and space is limited it

is advisable to make a prior

appointment. A Trust Fund to ensure
the future of the library has been set

up and details are available from

Edmund Frow.

Alexandra Walker

The studio glass department of

Royal Brierley Crystal, known as the
Foundry, is an exciting new venture

in the Stourbridge glass industry.
Here, Arlon Bayliss, the consultant
adviser for the project describes the

ideas behind the project and his

hopes for the future.

“In early February 1985 I was asked
by David Williams-Thomas,

Managing Director of Royal Brierley
Crystal, if I thought it would be a

good idea for his factory to build a

studio specifically to be used by

Studio Glass Artists. I was extremely
enthusiastic, saying I believed the

studio would be of enormous benefit
to all concerned. I was later asked if

I would like to advise and assist in

the setting up and running of the

workshop and I eagerly accepted.

Work began earnestly with

extensive modifications and .
building to create ‘The Foundry’

workshop and neighbouring factory

shop on the site of the old ‘Dudley

Foundry’, (conveniently opposite

Royal Brierley’s factory in North

Street). Interiors and exteriors were
re-modelled, re-painted,

re-concreted and re-glazed. It was a
glorious transformation.

We had decided that the Studio

would be best run by two resident

Glass Artists with the aims of

founding and operating a
commercially successful Craft Glass

Workshop, producing a high

standard of work. Some ideas,
hopefully, would spin off into the

main stream of Royal Brierley’s
product lines. The resident Artists

would also be responsible for
ensuring that all equipment worked

well for any visiting Artists.
A Workshop week-end’ was

arranged to interview short-listed
candidates. They brought work with

them as well as making pieces and

assisting each other in the Foundry
over two days. Jane Beebe and Jill
Devine were appointed.

By this time the Studio was

complete; 2000 sq. ft., well lit and

well equipped. The furnace, which

was built by Stourbridge College
Glass Department contains a

silliminite crucible of 200 lb.
capacity, is fired by fully
proportional controlled natural gas

and governed by computer. The
annealling oven is also computer
controlled and there is
comprehensive cutting and

polishing machinery.

Work is now in progress and, at
present, is being concentrated on

the design and production of three
ranges of Studio Glass. These are
being sold initially in Royal

Brierley’s Factory Shops but are

expected, eventually, to have much

wider destinations selling through

shops and galleries at home and

abroad.

Master and other glass blowers from
the adjacent factory have worked

with the Foundry’s resident Artists
and have shown great interest in

studio techniques. I believe that

some ideas have already filtered
back into the Factory.

The Studio has already attracted

interest from nationally and
internationally well-known Glass

Artists. Several have rented the

Studio at a cost of £100 per day

which includes five hours grinding
and polishing which can be

undertaken on any other day
.

The overall aims of the Foundry are

manifold and ambitious. It will

function as a centre for the exchange

of ideas, and as Factory and Craft
Glass meet, the production of high
quality work. It will be like a
‘stepping stone’, a Studio which can

be rented by newly fledged as well

as established Glass Artists. It will
enable some students to gain

valuable experience during holiday

and week-end periods. Finally with

all of this it will be on view to the

public.

The Factory’s excellent interest

continues, spurred on by
encouraging results. It is an honour

for me to be involved with the

setting up and running of such a
Studio, for it is my belief that the
need for it is great and the potential

it offers even greater.”

(Since the Foundry opened Neil
Harris, a lampworker and David
Prytherch, a glass engraver have

joined the staff.)

Other studio glass facilities in the

Stourbridge area include a major
investment by Stuart Crystal to
provide starter workshops at the

newly restored Red House Glass

Cone. Kay Yeomans and Bill Davis
have worked there since leaving

Stourbridge College last year. As a

result of that collaboration a range of

studio glass has been successfully
introduced by the company.

Adjacent to the Foundry itself Tessa
Clegg has opened a new studio to

continue her work in cast glass. At
Broadfield House the studio vacated
by Simon Gidden, the glass

engraver, has been leased to Louise

Goodman and Dave Green,
ex-students from North Staffs. Poly.
Louise works with kiln-fired glass

while Dave’s work consists of glass
constructions. At the Black Country
Museum Paul Bartlett practices

glass
cutting and engraving.

Monart Glass

“I am currently researching an

article on ‘Monart’ for the ‘British

Glass Between The Wars’
exhibition catalogue. As readers

will already know, this exhibition

is planned for the Spring of 1987

at Broadfield House Glass
Museum. However, I am still

trying to locate two missing items:

one is the ‘Monart’ colour recipe

book and the other is the table

and light fitting pattern book.

John Moncrieff Ltd, who made
‘Monart’ at their Perth factory,

kept a detailed recipe book of all

the pre-war colours. After the war

this seems to have disappeared

and ‘Monart’ labels are no longer
colour-coded.

Several copies of the other
pattern books have survived, but

the one dealing with the lamps

and ceiling light fittings has also

disappeared. Possibly the two

missing items are together

somewhere, but all of my
enquiries have drawn a blank so

far.

If any Glass Association member

can throw any light on whether

these two documents have

survived and, if so, where they
might be, I would be very

grateful. My address is 30,
Gisborne Close, Mickleover,

Derby DE3 5LU.”

Ian Turner

GA

i

News & Views

Book Reviews
Olive R. Jones and E. Ann Smith,

Glass of the British Military
1755-1820.
Paperback, 134 pp., 137

photos and line drawings,

Olive Jones et al and Catherine

Sullivan,
Glass Glossary.

Paperback, 184 pp., 152 photos and

line drawings.

Both books are available from the
Canadian Government Publishing

Centre, Supply and Services

Canada, Hull, Quebec, Canada, K1A

059.

The price of the Jones et al. book is

$12.25 in Canada, $14.70 outside

Canada; the Jones and Smith book is

$7.95 in Canada, $9.55 outside

Canada. Mail orders should be

accompanied by cheques or money

orders, in Canadian funds, payable

to
the Receiver General for Canada.

French versions are available from

the same sources and for the same

prices as the English issues.

These two publications from Parks

Canada are well worth the attention

of
those interested in eighteenth and

nineteenth century British glass.

Glass of the British Military
is a

study, by types, of the glassware of

the years 1755-1820 recovered from
British Military sites in Canada. Most

such glass is British, with an
admixture of continental, and a wide

range of drinking glasses,

tableware, storage vessels,

medicinal wares and miscellaneous

items is discussed. Reference is
made to documentary sources such

as American newspaper

advertisements, merchants’ papers,

advertisements by British military
officers and, most interestingly,

Sample Books for Sheffield plate and
Britannia ware with glass

receptacles dating from the early
nineteenth century. The glass is also

put in its social context through
quotations from contemporary

accounts of its uses and through

paintings and prints, some in North

American collections. Altogether

the book is highly informative about

a little known aspect of British glass

exports in the years around 1800.

The
Glass Glossary
is an extremely

thorough work, presenting a
standard system for the cataloguing

of the tableglass, containers and flat
glass found on Canadian

archaeological sites, whether
domestic, military or industrial. The

glass discussed is largely British

and French and, to a lesser extent,
American. General terminology in
respect of manufacture, form,

decoration etc. is considered in

detail and definitions of types are

attempted. This is a problematic

area. Evidence from the (largely
unpublished) British factory pattern
books of the first half of the

nineteenth century is, not

Venetian Cameo

Glass
In the article in the Journal Dr. & Mrs.

Leonard Rakow stated that a chip

from the vase in their collection had
been sent for chemical analysis but

at the time of publication the report
had not been completed. Since then
Leonard Rakow has kindly sent the

findings which are published here:-

“The chemical analysis proved most
enlightening and verified the fact

that what we had originally thought

was an unfinished piece of cameo
glass (Fig. 11), probably by the
unnaturally, not brought into play,

and some terms will seem arbitrary

to British readers, for example, the

use of the word ‘pitcher’ as a generic

term for ewers, jugs and cream jugs

etc. However, the book draws

attention to a wide range of sources
for glass terminology, and both

archaeologists and museum
professionals will find it helpful in

thinking about cataloguing
procedures, which frequently

remain rudimentary in British

museums.

Ian
Wolfenden

Locke-Lechevrel team,
was actually

an unfinished piece of Venetian
Cameo Glass.

The analysis revealed certain

salient findings which had

previously been discovered in the
Libbey-Curtis vase in the Toledo

Museum of Art (Fig. 1). The formula

was a soda lime formula with a low
lead content. There was no arsenic,

and the antimonate was high and
represented the white opacifying

factor. It would appear that this may

be the chemical hallmark of

Venetian Cameo Glass.”

CC

Regional Reports

As a regular feature we invite our
readers to send in a photograph

together with a few words about one

of the items in their own collection.
The first contribution is from Mr.
Lester.

continued from page 2

well respected names within the
field of ceramics thus one would

expect an initial collaboration of the
highest standard. In this the reader

is not disappointed particularly

should they have a penchant for

English porcelain. Profusely

illustrated with plenty of colour
photographs this well-produced

magazine takes us on a visit to the
new Wedgwood Museum at
Barlaston, offers new evidence for

the sites of the Chelsea porcelain,

investigates the mystery which
This ale, 19.5cm. tall, has a drawn

funnel bowl engraved with a
Jacobite rose and bud, the reverse

with crossed barley ears, and was
made about 1750. The glass is
illustrated in Arthur Churchill’s

‘Glass Notes’ of December, 1954 (No.
14), which makes the following

observation: –

“This particular glass has a strong
claim to attention in itself, in that it

appears to be an indubitable
two-piece air twist glass with a

folded foot. There would be nothing
in that had the glass been given the

multiple spiral air twist, but it has
not; it has what we term a spiral

gauze and this runs (in part) quite a

way up the wall of the bowl, i.e., the
twist does not cease with a
horizontal shear, which ordinarily
leaves a horizontal weld-mark.

“Other glasses with this twist (but a
plain foot) have looked precisely

similar, yet on closer survey all have

been seen to be, ‘side-welded’, that

is to say the bowl and stem were so
joined as to leave a diagonal

weld-mark. The present specimen
leaves no trace of anything of the

kind and with its folded foot must be

accepted as new to our Check List

and a unique specimen so far as we

are concerned.”

surrounds Melbourne creamwares,
reconsiders the activities and
identities of William Reid and
William Ball of Liverpool and

surveys some dated examples of
English blue-and-white porcelain.

There are also sections dealing with

exhibitions, sales, market, books, a
profile, diary and a list of societies

which combine with the scholarly

articles to form a first-rate initial
venture. We wish the new launch

and subsequent issues every
possible success.

Arnold Mountford
NATIONAL MEETINGS

Saturday 3rd May — Bath

Saturday 12th July — Cannon Hall,

Barnsley.

FUTURE GROUP MEETINGS

South East.
It has been possible to arrange for

Glass Association members to see

the glass collection of the
Worshipful Company of Grocers on
Monday, 12th May 1986. Mr. Derek

Davis of Aspreys, who has a strong

personal link with this glass, has
kindly agreed to be on hand to
explain the formation of this

collection, noted for its fine
balusters, taper- and candle- sticks.

Members should meet at the

Grocers’ Hall, Princes Street,

London EC2, promptly at 12.25 p.m.

(The nearest underground station is
Bank). A separate notice will be sent

to South East members nearer to the

date of the meeting.

North West

Saturday, 31st May, 2.00 p.m. –
Warrington Museum and Art

Gallery.

A visit to the exhibition “Best of
Pressed”, with a talk by Jim Edgley

and Eva Frumin about their

collection of pressed glass, which
forms the bulk of the exhibits.

Midlands
Thursday, 12th June, 7.30 p.m. —

Broadfield House Glass Museum.

Reminiscences of a glass collector

and dealer. Tony Waugh, our
Chairman, will speak about how he
began collecting and his

experiences of the sale rooms, and
John Brooks will talk about his life as

a Dealer in Antique Glass.

COPY DATES
April 21st for June issue

July 21st for September issue