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Fake News?

10/1/2020

5 Comments

 
Every early Staffordshire pottery figure tells a tale, and the tale I am about to recount is one I have told in my books, but I tell it here again because there is new development in the story. A twist in the tale---or is it in the tail of the yarn?

It all began many years ago, when my friend Nick Burton helped me acquire this stunning "Sherratt" figure at auction.
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
As you see, the figure is titled MENAGERIE, and I was puzzled because, as we well know, a menagerie looks more like this.
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
Then around midnight one night, I stumbled across a broadside in the National Library of Scotland. Dramatically titled "FEARFUL ACCIDENT! FOUR LIVES LOST," it recounted the gory happenings of February 1834, when the menagerie lion and tiger escaped during the night from Wombwell's menagerie. The animals attacked and killed four people, including a woman with a child in her arms.

Suddenly, the title MENAGERIE on my figure group made sense. This was the tiger who escaped, and the mother and child were its victims. I was so excited with my discovery, but who was there to tell, besides the dogs sleeping at my feet?
The broadside cited the Northumberland Herald as the source of the story, and I could not wait to get to London, where I accessed the British Library's microfilm copies of the newspaper and found the same account, almost word for word.

The news of this bloody animal misadventure spread like lightening across Britain because newspaper after newspaper printed the same account. As the disaster was said to have happened in Worksworth, just a stone's throw from the Potteries, it is not surprising that it inspired Staffordshire's potters to capture the horror of it in clay. And with my new-found knowledge and with the help of those potters, the tale unravelled.
​
​What of the other two victims? The report tells us that one was a young boy, and here he is, again courtesy of "Sherratt".
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
Courtesy the William Herbert and Nancy Hunt Collection.
In the figure group below, we have another depiction of events. This time, the lion is clawing the mother---the very same figure that the tiger is mauling in my MENAGERIE group.
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
Courtesy Bonham's.
What of the fourth victim? Newspaper reports did not identify the fourth victim, but the figure group below suggests that he was believed to be a black man.
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
Courtesy Bonham's.
The two Sherratt figure groups below again confirm that the fourth victim was indeed thought to be a black man. Lest you doubt it, the second group is titled THE DEATH OF A NEGRO, but, sadly the man has been lost....or perhaps he is in the beast's tummy. (By the way, don't let the spots distract you. In the early nineteenth century, there was still much confusion and ignorance as to which Big Cat was which!)
Picture
Courtesy The Potteries Museum and Art Gallery.
antique Staffordshire pottery, antique Staffordshire figure, pearlware, Sherratt, Menagerie, Wombwell's menagerie, Death of a Negro, Myrna Schkolne
Courtesy Bonham's.
Each of these figures is known from only one example. But the joy of collecting is that you just never know what will turn up next. Recently, I was made aware of a large "Sherratt" tiger (on the scale of the tiger in Death of Munrow groups) with a black man in his jaws. That treasure has resided in the Czech Republic for around a century!

Similarly, the joy of researching is that you just never know what will be unearthed. Nowadays, British newspapers are searchable online, so today I would be able to access the story of the menagerie escape in a few minutes--no need to fly to London and spend hours scrutinizing microfilm. And so I decided to research it yet again. Sure enough, the story appears in umpteen publications across Britain in late February/early March 1834.  But fast forward another month or so, here comes the twist in the tale: very brief retractions appear in those same newspapers. 

It seems the story was fake news, a puff piece that the menagerist George Wombwell planted to drum up excitement and boost attendance at his show. Attitudes then were very different from those that prevail today, and animals that had taken four human lives were a drawcard. Add to that, many visitors secretly hoped to witness another gory mishap!

Although the retractions were published with as little research as the original story, I concede that the escapes of 1834 were almost certainly fake news. But the men who captured in clay the lion, the tiger, and their four victims did not know that. The tale fired their imaginations and inspired the creation of a handful of truly fabulous figures groups.





5 Comments
Lisa
10/1/2020 08:29:51 pm

Fascinating! Thank you for sharing

Reply
Mary Met
10/4/2020 06:27:35 pm

Awesome! Must have been upsetting to people in that day and age to see a mother & baby portrayed as mauled/killed by tigers & lions!

Reply
paul f
10/7/2020 09:22:26 am

a wonderful story that illustrates both hard word and skill of the author and the makers

Reply
Michael G
10/12/2020 07:05:24 pm

What a great story! I'm so impressed by these figures that I forget the gory subject I'm looking at! Can't remember looking at a baby in such peril and thinking 'Fantastic!'

Reply
Nick Frost
10/13/2020 05:43:28 am

Lovely article.

Reply



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    Myrna Schkolne, antique Staffordshire pottery, expert
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