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File:Grindley-Thomsons-Teal-White-Thornley-Soup-Plate.jpg|A soup plate for the Thompson's Lunch Room chain, in the Thornley pattern. John R. Thompson opened his first lunch room in Chicago in 1891 and by 1914 had a chain of 68 eateries in several cities. This early soup plate was manufactured by Grindley Hotel Ware in England; from the 1930s through the 1950s, Thompson's purchased restaurant ware from the Buffalo, Carr, and McNichol potteries. The chain was infamous for refusing to serve African-American customers. In 1944 the first mass sit-in against its Jim Crow policies was held in Washington, DC, by 200 students from Howard University. In 1950, Mary Church Terrell and other Howard activists again sought to desegregate Thompson's, under old Reconstruction laws that forbade discrimination, and in 1953, they won their case in the U.S. Supreme Court,  
File:Grindley-Thomsons-Teal-White-Thornley-Soup-Plate.jpg|A soup plate for the Thompson's Lunch Room chain, in the Thornley pattern. John R. Thompson opened his first lunch room in Chicago in 1891 and by 1914 had a chain of 68 eateries in several cities. This early soup plate was manufactured by Grindley Hotel Ware in England, but from the 1930s through the 1950s, the company purchased restaurant ware from the Buffalo, Carr, and McNichol potteries. Thompson's was infamous for refusing to serve African-American customers. In 1944 the first mass sit-in against its Jim Crow policies was held in Washington, DC, by 200 students from Howard University. In 1950, Mary Church Terrell and other Howard activists again sought to desegregate Thompson's, under old Reconstruction laws that forbade discrimination, and in 1953, they won their case in the U.S. Supreme Court,  


File:Thompsons-Syracuse-Mug-1927.jpg|The backstamp on this mug reads "Made for Albert Pick & Co. / for J. R. Thompson's / Buffalo China /  1923." Albert Pick and Co. was a large restaurant ware distributor in Chicago, Illinois, which was also the headquarters of the Thompson's restaurant chain. By the 1960s there were 100 Thomson's lunch rooms, as the company actively bought up smaller chains and expanded into cafeterias and frozen foods until it was itself consumed by Green Giant Foods in 1971. Buffalo China was founded as the Buffalo Pottery in Buffalo, New York, in 1901 by John D. Larkin, head of the Larkin Soap Company to supply premiums for mail-order catalogue customers, but it grew into one of the largest manufacturers of vitrified and custom imprinted institutional, restaurant, railroad, steamship, and hotel ware in America.  
File:Thompsons-Syracuse-Mug-1927.jpg|The backstamp on this mug reads "Made for Albert Pick & Co. / for J. R. Thompson's / Buffalo China /  1923." Albert Pick and Co. was a large restaurant ware distributor in Chicago, Illinois, which was also the headquarters of the Thompson's restaurant chain. By the 1960s there were 100 Thomson's lunch rooms, as the company actively bought up smaller chains and expanded into cafeterias and frozen foods until it was itself consumed by Green Giant Foods in 1971. Buffalo China was founded as the Buffalo Pottery in Buffalo, New York, in 1901 by John D. Larkin, head of the Larkin Soap Company to supply premiums for mail-order catalogue customers, but it grew into one of the largest manufacturers of vitrified and custom imprinted institutional, restaurant, railroad, steamship, and hotel ware in America.  

Latest revision as of 06:03, 2 May 2025

Welcome to Porcelain Madness, a decorative annex to The Mystic Tea Room, where every piece of chinaware tells a story. This site showcases beautiful top-marked restaurant chinaware from around 1900 through the 1960s. Some of the pieces are displayed as is if an art museum, others form a sequence of cozy photos featuring plated food. As this site grows, it may be split into several galleries. We shall see!

catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
Porcelain Madness


Special thanks to my dear husband and creative partner nagasiva yronwode for illustrations, scans, and clean-ups.


And now, let the madness begin!