Porcelain Madness: Difference between revisions

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(adding data on Hotal Grant, Oakland)
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<!--This is Hotel Grant Oakland Custard Cup. It is a Shenango piece with the green outlined Native American on the backstamp. The Hotel Grant was at 2338 E. 14th St. [Now International Blvd]., near 23rd Avenue, and was advertised in the Oakland Tribune for May 1st, 1927 as "Just opened. Overnight and per week. Sunny, light rooms. Finest Box Springs and hair mattresses made. Steam heat, hot water. Lobby phones. Quiet and Homelike. We know you will like it. Inspection invited. One Block to S.P. [Southern Pacific railroad station at 16th St.], Key [Key Line trolley station]." I believe the building is still standing, although it has been converted to apartments with shops at ground level. It is in what is called the Fruitvale district, which is down by the railroad tracks and the Bay, a working-class neighborhood then, and worse now.-->
<!--This is a Hotel Grant Oakland Calif. custard / egg cup. It is a Shenango piece with the green outlined Native American on the backstamp. The Hotel Grant was at 2338 E. 14th St. [Now International Blvd]., near 23rd Avenue, and was advertised in the Oakland Tribune for May 1st, 1927 as "Just opened. Overnight and per week. Sunny, light rooms. Finest Box Springs and Hair Mattresses made. Steam Heat, Hot Water, Lobby Phones. Quiet and Homelike. We know you will like it. Inspection invited. One Block to S.P. [Southern Pacific railroad station at 16th St.], Key [Key Line trolley station]." I believe the building is still standing, although it has been converted to apartments with shops at ground level. It is in what is called the Fruitvale district, which is down by the railroad tracks and the Bay, a working-class neighborhood then, and worse now.-->
File:Jackson-Green-Airplane-Greater-Rockford-Airport-Plate.jpg|A green airbrushed plate made by Jackson China in Falls Creek, West Virginia and topmarked for the Greater Rockford Airport in Rockford, Illinois. These plates also come in blue and rose-pink. They were made for use in the Greater Rockford Airport Restaurant. Plates have also been found with no topmark. The plane is a bit of a fantasy which most people identify as a DC-3. One of the things i love about this plate is that although the dominating image is a then-modern airplane flying above a city-scape, over on the left side there are stylized grasses, perhaps pasture land or stalks of wheat, which serve to remind us that even though Rockford had an airport, it was not far removed from its roots as a Midwestern prairie town. As the decades passed, Chicagoland grew and spread, and Rockford was subsumed by it; the airport is now known as Chicago Rockford International Airport. This piece is back-stamped with the so-called "vanishing Jackson logo" and was not date-coded, but we do know that construction of the Greater Rockford Airport and terminal began in 1954, during the era that decommissioned WWII military DC-3 airplanes were being shifted over to commercial use. The style of the plane and the "modernistic" narrow rim of the plate would seem to date this piece from 1955 to 1960.  
File:Jackson-Green-Airplane-Greater-Rockford-Airport-Plate.jpg|A green airbrushed plate made by Jackson China in Falls Creek, West Virginia and topmarked for the Greater Rockford Airport in Rockford, Illinois. These plates also come in blue and rose-pink. They were made for use in the Greater Rockford Airport Restaurant. Plates have also been found with no topmark. The plane is a bit of a fantasy which most people identify as a DC-3. One of the things i love about this plate is that although the dominating image is a then-modern airplane flying above a city-scape, over on the left side there are stylized grasses, perhaps pasture land or stalks of wheat, which serve to remind us that even though Rockford had an airport, it was not far removed from its roots as a Midwestern prairie town. As the decades passed, Chicagoland grew and spread, and Rockford was subsumed by it; the airport is now known as Chicago Rockford International Airport. This piece is back-stamped with the so-called "vanishing Jackson logo" and was not date-coded, but we do know that construction of the Greater Rockford Airport and terminal began in 1954, during the era that decommissioned WWII military DC-3 airplanes were being shifted over to commercial use. The style of the plane and the "modernistic" narrow rim of the plate would seem to date this piece from 1955 to 1960.  



Latest revision as of 02:40, 31 August 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!