CUP - STATE BRICK WORKS

c. 1951 - 1976
Overview

Cream glazed earthenware cup having black logo On front . Logo has a belt around the outside with text on it. Logo [STATE BRICK WORKS]. Inside the belt is a black swan facing left. Ear shaped handle on right side. Makers mark stamped into base of cup. Crack on front of cup going from rim and curves down to the bottom of the handle

Historical information

This tea set was manufactured by HL Brisbane and Wunderlich at their Subiaco porcelain works under the business name Bristile China.
Between 1946 and 1961, the company produced a range of ‘Fancy Wear’ called Wembley Ware and became one of the most popular range of Australian produced ceramics and was sold all across the country and in New Zealand.
In the 1890s, the Armadale to Byford area was identified as having excellent clay and shale deposits for brick making and by the early 1900s had two private commercial brickworks operating at Cardup and Armadale. In 1913, the Labor Scaddan Government, who after winning government in 1911 implemented a program of state run enterprises, opened the State Brickworks in Byford and extended the Armadale line to the town so bricks could be easily transported from the site.
In November 1950, a second State Brickworks site was opened in Armadale between Southwestern Highway and the railway line and by 1952 it was producing enough bricks to build 80 homes a week. It was possibly around this time that the State Brickworks commissioned Bristile China to produce a crockery for its sites.
In 1961, both State Brickworks sites were sold to the construction company Hawker Siddeley Group Ltd, with the Byford site closed in 1964 and the Armadale site operating as a brickworks through to the early 2000s.

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-33-AK1976.128
Width
84 mm
Height or length
80 mm
Depth
110 mm
Inscriptions and markings

makers mark [Wembly / WARE]

Statement of significance

This object is part of a collection that represents the commercial history of the City of Armadale. It represents the many different businesses that have operated in the local area and how those businesses have evolved over time. Businesses play an important role within a community, they provide wanted and needed goods and services, employment, income and opportunities to the local community. They can also operate as important social connectors, places where people gathered and engaged with other members of the community.

Primary significance criteria
Historic significance
Comparative significance criteria
Object’s condition or completeness
Well provenanced
City of Armadale - History House

City of Armadale - History House

Organisation Details
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