Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
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Creator: Victoria Pottery Company
A Victoria Pottery Majolica Cobalt Basketweave Sardine Box, English, ca. 1883
By Victoria Pottery Company
Located in Banner Elk, NC
A Rare Victoria Pottery Company Majolica Sardine Box with five sardines on green glazed lotus pads and other foliage, trimmed in yellow bamboo with green shoots, the body and integra...
Category
1880s English Victorian Antique Victoria Pottery Company Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
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Victoria Pottery (VPC) Majolica plate 8.75-ins, English, circa 1875, with simulated bamboo edging, colorful bamboo shoots, on a vivid turquoise basket-weave ground. VPC painted pattern mark 'M110' to reverse.
Provenance: From the Estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Sotheby's New York, April 22-25, 1999, Sale number 7293, Lot number 956 (color illustration p. 369).
For over 28 years we have been among the Nation’s preeminent specialists in fine antique majolica.
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt Whitney (1908-1999), the widow of John Hay "Jock" Whitney and the first wife of James Roosevelt II, the eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was one of the three glamorous Cushing sisters of Boston. Married at twenty-two, she was FDR's clear favorite during the White House years, where she often stood in as a highly competent, enthusiastic and poised Hostess, a job which the first lady deplored. Betsey’s social-climbing mother preened her three daughters from birth to make socially and financially advantageous marriages. And that they did. Her elder sister, Mary (Minnie), married Vincent Astor, and her younger sister, Barbara, whom they called 'Babe' form a young age, married Standard Oil heir, Stanley Mortimer, Jr., and after divorcing him, married William S. Paley, founder of the CBS television network (Babe Paley). These glittering doyennes of New York and international society defined taste, what was in and what wasn't, for thirty years.
After divorcing James Roosevelt in 1940, Betsey married Jock Whitney on March 1, 1942 in an informal family-only ceremony held at her mother’s New York apartment on East 86th Street. She was 33 and he was 37. She had two young daughters, Sara and Kate; he had no children from his previous marriage. As one of the wealthiest men in the world throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, Jock achieved his great fortune through equal parts inheritance, business acumen and flat-out good luck. His concerns were as vast and varied as they are interesting; for example, in 1933 he acquired a 15% interest in Technicolor Corporation, and in 1942 when David O. Selznick liquidated his company for tax reasons, and sold his share in gone with the wind to his business partner, Jock Whitney, for $500,000, who in turn sold it on to MGM for $2.8 million, so that the studio owned the film outright. In 1946, he founded J.H. Whitney & Company, the oldest venture capital firm in the U.S.
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Victoria Pottery Company ceramics for sale on 1stDibs.
Victoria Pottery Company ceramics are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of majolica and are designed with extraordinary care. Many of the original ceramics by Victoria Pottery Company were created in the Victorian style in united kingdom during the 19th century. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider ceramics by Minton, Doulton Burslem, and Joseph Holdcroft. Prices for Victoria Pottery Company ceramics can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $2,485 and can go as high as $2,485, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $2,485.



