North Staffordshire History
Tales from the Potteries, Newcastle and the Staffordshire Moorlands
08 June 2021
The Great Storm of 1872
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B eing situated in such a hilly region, widespread flooding is a rarity in Stoke-on-Trent, but occasionally chance extremes of weather have ...
11 April 2021
Ken Ray's Soldiers: Private Philip Yates
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Ken Ray, a long-time researcher into the lives of local soldiers has assembled an impressive list of North Staffordshire men who served in t...
07 February 2021
Old News from the Potteries
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Regular newspaper coverage of events in the Potteries only really started at the end of the 18th century with the advent in 1795 of the Staf...
02 February 2021
Elizabeth Smith and the Mason Connection
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In the early 2000s I was contacted by Ernie Luck a collector and researcher of Mason's pottery who had been looking into a vague connect...
14 January 2021
The Battle of Burslem
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Thomas Cooper, the Chartist whose fiery speeches sparked the riots. In 1842, a prolonged miner's strike had crippled the Staffordshire P...
11 January 2021
Reg Mitchell Takes the Proverbial
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Colin Melbourne's statue of R. J. Mitchell outside the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery, Hanley. In 1911, long before he went on to desi...
16 November 2020
A Disposition to Riot
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Between 1799 and 1801 food riots, brought on by scarcity and high prices which in turn had been caused by poor harvests and the effects of N...
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