Bakewell, Pears and Company

Bakewell, Pears and Company was Pittsburgh's best known glass manufacturer. The company was most famous for its lead crystal glass, which was often decorated by cutting or engraving. It also made window glass, bottles, and lamps. The company was one of the first American glass manufacturers to produce glass using mechanical pressing. In the 1820s and 1830s, Bakewell glassware was purchased for the White House by presidents James Monroe and Andrew Jackson. Founder Benjamin Bakewell is considered by some to be father of the crystal glassware business in the United States.

Bakewell, Pears & Co.
FormerlyBakewell & Ensell
Benjamin Bakewell & Co.
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
Bakewell, Page &   Bakewells
Bakewells & Anderson
Bakewells & Co.
Bakewell & Pears
Company typePartnership
IndustryGlassware
Founded1808 (1808)
FounderBenjamin Bakewell, Benjamin Page, Edward Ensell
Defunct1882
Fateclosed and factory site sold
HeadquartersWater and Grant streets (1808-1854); Bingham Street (1854-1888),
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Key people
Benjamin Bakewell, Thomas Bakewell, John Palmer Pears
Productsblown and pressed glassware, including lead crystal with cutting and engraving
Revenue$150,000 (1877) (equivalent to $4,291,875 in 2023)
Number of employees
125 (1877)

The company was founded in 1808 by Benjamin Bakewell, Benjamin Page, Robert Kinder and Company represented by Thomas Kinder, and Edward Ensell. The original company name was Bakewell and Ensell, and the factory was called the Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory. The company had nine different names through its lifetime, which typically changed when principals in the partnership changed. The name Bakewell was used in all nine names. Bakewell family members, as well as members of the Page and Pears families were involved with the company. The name Bakewell, Pears and Company was used for the longest period, 1844 through 1880. The glass works was closed in 1882, and the facility was sold to a wire manufacturer.

English businessman Benjamin Bakewell recruited skilled English glassworkers that enabled the company to become well known for its glass cutting and engraving. Some of the company's local workers became skilled enough to start their own glass companies. Among those glass men were John Adams (Adams & Company), James Seaman Atterbury (Atterbury & Company), James Bryce (Bryce Brothers), David Challinor (Challinor Taylor), and William McCully (McCully and Company). Pittsburgh became the nation's glassmaking center by the 1850s. Its location provided access to river transportation, coal for fuel, and good quality sand.

Background

edit

Benjamin Bakewell moved to New York from London in 1793. In London he had been an importer of luxury goods, and he started the same type of business in his new home city.[1] Living with Bakewell's family was his wife's widowed sister and her daughter Sarah Palmer. Sarah Palmer became romantically involved with a young English clerk in Bakewell's firm named Thomas Pears, and they married in 1806.[2][Note 1] Bakewell was very familiar with French and English fashions and styles.[4] His import business prospered, and he diversified by establishing a brewery in New Haven, Connecticut.[5] The brewery business did not do well, and it was destroyed by fire in 1803. It was not rebuilt.[6] The import business thrived enough that by 1807, Bakewell owned multiple houses and stores in New York—plus land in Vermont, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.[7] Among those assisting him in his New York import business was Thomas Woodhouse Bakewell, son of Benjamin's brother William. Benjamin's own son, also named Thomas, also became involved in the business.[8][Note 2]

The Napoleonic Wars eventually ruined Bakewell's import business. Because of war between France and Great Britain, American ships' cargoes and crews were always under the threat of being confiscated by those two naval powers. In November 1806 Great Britain enacted a blockade of the European continent. Napoleon responded by issuing the Berlin Decree that blockaded Great Britain. The United States responded by legislating the Embargo Act of 1807, which said that United States vessels could not sail to foreign ports. This ruined Bakewell's import business, and he was bankrupt by January 1808.[10] After losing everything except his clothing, furniture, and personal library, Bakewell was eager to leave New York.[11] Businessman Benjamin Page lived on the same street as Bakewell. He also lost money because of the Embargo Act, but his losses were not as severe as Bakewell's. Page closed his importing business in 1808, and sought better places to invest his money.[12]

Beginning

edit
 
Pittsburgh had river access to the western territories
 
Smokestack on right is part of the Bakewell glass works

In 1807 George Robinson and Edward Ensell began building a glass works in Pittsburgh. The town would have a population of 4,700 by 1810, with over 200 brick houses plus over 350 wooden structures.[13] Pittsburgh had a transportation advantage for glassmaking because it was located where the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers converge to form the Ohio River. It was closer to the growing new western territories than the Atlantic Coast glass factories that were separated by the Allegheny Mountains.[14] Pittsburgh also had coal available nearby that could be used by manufacturers for fuel.[15] Robinson and Ensell depleted their funding before construction was completed, so their incomplete works was sold in 1808 to New York merchants Benjamin Bakewell, Benjamin Page, and Robert Kinder and Company represented by Thomas Kinder.[16]

The glass works was located along the Monongahela River at the foot of Grant Street extending from the south side of Water Street to the river.[17] This gave the facility easy access to the town and to river transportation.[18] The new company was known as Bakewell and Ensell, and consisted of Bakewell, Page, Ensell, and Robert Kinder and Company.[19] Bakewell was named managing partner, and he moved to Pittsburgh and provided the business expertise for the company. Page and Kinder remained living on the nation's east coast.[12] Ensell provided the glassmaking expertise, which included the processes for making window glass and flint glass (leaded crystal).[20] Operations began by August 1808.[18][Note 3]

Already familiar with importing quality goods, Bakewell believed there was a market for high quality glassware. He was already aware of the designs that were popular in Europe.[4] He would not become the first producer of crystal glassware in the United States. That had already happened in the previous century, before the United States existed, at a short–lived works owned by Henry William Stiegel.[4] During the early 1800s in the United States, the production of crystal (a.k.a. flint) glass was limited by a lack of skilled workers and the scarcity of a necessary additive known as red lead.[22] Much of the crystal available in the United States during the early 1800s was imported from England, and Bakewell employed English and French craftsmen to compete in that market.[4]

Benjamin Bakewell and Company

edit
 
Benjamin Bakewell (1767–1844)

Ensell and the other three partners did not get along. The Bakewell family believed Ensell misrepresented his qualifications.[23] Ensell left the company in 1809, and the partnership was dissolved after only six months. One historian doubts that Ensell had faulty glassmaking expertise, since Bakewell lost a lawsuit against Ensell in June of the same year—and Ensell started another glass factory in 1810.[24] Bakewell and the two other remaining principals continued the company.[25] The firm was renamed Benjamin Bakewell and Company.[26][Note 4] Bakewell's company called its glass works the Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory.[28] The factory's original furnace contained only six pots.[29][Note 5] Changes were necessary at the glass works because of a number of problems. The furnace for melting glass was not well constructed. The work force was not highly skilled, and it was reluctant to train new employees (or management). Some of the raw materials used to make glass were delivered by wagon from Philadelphia and New Jersey—a considerable distance for the time that was difficult to travel because the Allegheny Mountains had to be crossed. Sand, a major raw material for glass, was obtained from near Pittsburgh—but it was low-quality and more suited for window or bottle glass than glassware.[32]

Bakewell learned the glass business and worked to solve his factory's problems. The furnace was replaced with a ten-pot version in 1810.[29] Better raw material sources were found, and Bakewell was able to produce better quality glass.[33] The company's products were mostly glassware, including tumblers, wine glasses, jars, and egg cups. Flint glass versions of these products could be made because Bakewell was able to make his own red lead using Mississippi pig lead.[34] Among the new hires in 1810 was former factory superintendent and glass cutter William Peter Eichbaum, who cut the first crystal chandelier made in America. The chandelier was sold by Bakewell to an innkeeper for $300 (equivalent to $5,844 in 2023).[35]

Bakewell's son Thomas became a valued assistant and expert chemist.[36] Although many European countries forbid their glassworkers to come to the United States as part of an effort to retain glassmaking secrets, Bakewell improved his workforce by smuggling skilled glass workers from England to Pittsburgh.[37] Bakewell's glass works began to establish a reputation for "quality and workmanship".[18] Effective March 13, 1811, the company's partnership was dissolved, and it was announced that the "business will in future be carried on by B. Page and B. Bakewell, under the firm of the former partnership."[38] Robert Kinder and Company withdrew from the partnership because it was having financial difficulties. Bakewell's brother William, and associates of Page, provided assistance to make sure the partnership continued.[39]

Effects of war

edit
 
Engraved bowl ~1810–1820
Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Napoleonic Wars and resulting tariffs had already made trade with Britain and France difficult. The War of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain was good and bad for American glassmakers. England, part of Great Britain, controlled the supply of a necessary raw material for crystal—red lead. It also controlled the known supply of good quality sand. The Embargo Act of 1807, and then the War of 1812, made it nearly impossible for American companies to acquire the raw materials necessary to produce good quality crystal.[40] However, the lack of European goods also meant that consumers in the United States became dependent on domestic producers for manufactured products. The number of glass factories in the United States increased from 22 in 1810 to 44 in 1815.[41] Many of these factories produced window glass or bottles, which did not require red lead or high quality sand.[42]

In the case of Benjamin Bakewell and Company, domestic sources of red lead and good sand had been discovered.[Note 6] Management at Bakewell realized that they had an opportunity to take advantage of an increased demand for glass. Capacity of the furnace and factory were doubled in 1813, and the company prospered beyond expectations.[44] Bakewell's oldest son Thomas formally joined the company on September 1, 1813. Although Thomas Bakewell was a salaried employee and not a shareholding partner, the company changed its name to Bakewell, Page and Bakewell. At that time Page began plans to move to Pittsburgh, and he arrived with his family in 1814.[45] By 1815 the company employed 30 men and 30 boys.[46]

Difficult post–war period

edit

"It is about ten years since the commencement of our establishment, and before our business was oppressed by the excessive importation of foreign glass, we gave employment to nearly a hundred hands, and maintained about four hundred persons; at present we find it difficult to furnish work for ten."

Bakewell, Page & Bakewell in a letter dated August 20, 1819[47]

The War of 1812 ended with the Treaty of Ghent, which was signed December 24, 1814, and ratified to take effect on February 17, 1815.[48] During that year, Thomas Bakewell visited England to recruit more skilled glassworkers and to acquire samples of English glassware. Since glassworkers were still not allowed to emigrate, a warrant was issued for Bakewell's arrest—but he escaped detention.[49][Note 7] President James Madison retained wartime duties on imports until June 30, 1816.[51] At that time, England began dumping low–priced glass products in the United States while keeping its price for red lead high.[40]

The introduction of the steamboat in the United States enabled imports to move from the port of New Orleans up the Mississippi River to the western markets of the United States—which affected Pittsburgh glassmakers.[52] Another glass manufacturer in Pittsburgh, Bolton and Encell, failed in the summer of 1818 because of the foreign competition.[53] Page wrote that "from the beginning of 1817 till about the middle of 1822 we were literally gasping for breath".[54] The British/English competition caused some American glass factories to go into bankruptcy.[40] Bakewell used 80 to 100 tons of raw materials in 1815, but only used 20 tons in 1820. Its workforce changed from 30 men and 30 boys to 10 men and 12 boys.[55]

Bottle works

edit

The first attempt at a black bottle side project by the Bakewell partners had a short life.[Note 8] A partnership called Page, Bakewell & Bostwick existed in 1814 and 1815 for the purpose of making black glass bottles.[57] Page eventually believed that newcomer Henry Bostwick, who represented himself to be a glassblower, was instead a very intelligent fraud. He also believed that Bostwick planned to convince Bakewell to replace Page with Bostwick in all connections. Bostwick, who was married to Page's wife's sister, left town a few months after his (Bostwock) wife died suddenly in September 1815. The partnership had lasted less than one year.[58]

Thomas Pears, a former employee of Bakewell in New York who had most recently been involved with a sawmill project in Kentucky, was hired by Bakewell, Page & Bakewell in 1816 to lead in another try at a bottle works startup.[59] Pears went to England and France in 1816 and 1818 to recruit workers, and family members believe he used a disguise to evade authorities.[60] Pears' new bottle works, called the Pittsburgh Porter Bottle Manufactory, was located adjacent to the Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory. While the older works made high quality flint glass, the bottle works used lower quality glass known as "black glass".[61] The company associated with the bottle works was called Thomas Pears and Company. Its partners were Pears, Page, and the two Bakewells. Production began in March 1819, but the company failed in less than one year.[62] The partners then turned their focus on saving their flint glass business.[63]

Publicity and sales

edit

The associate curator of decorative arts at the Yale University Art Gallery has commented that "Benjamin Bakewell understood showmanship".[64] In 1816, Bakewell presented two decanters to President Madison that generated publicity for his company.[65] When President James Monroe visited Pittsburgh in September 1817, Bakewell also presented him with a pair of elegant cut glass decanters. Monroe ordered glassware, which helped to deflect criticism about imported furnishings at the White House. The total bill for the White House glassware was $1,032 (nearly equal to the company's total cash assets and equivalent to $19,685 in 2023).[66] The presentation objects and order for the White House enhanced the Bakewell reputation. The "diamond cut glass Monroe pattern" became a stock item for Bakewell.[67]

Sales downriver

edit
 
1821 newspaper advertisement

After the failure of the bottle works, Thomas Pears began selling Bakewell glass and collecting debt for the company. This lasted from 1820 to 1822.[68] Much of this work was done downriver from the Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory, at places such as Cincinnati and Nashville.[68] Letters written by Pears to his wife discuss additional locations, such as Wheeling, Louisville, and St. Louis.[69][Note 9]

Selling any products was difficult because the people in the American west had very little money.[71] In some cases, barter goods were accepted in lieu of money.[72] Although Bakewell products were considered very expensive at that time, they compared favorably with glassware from England and France. Among their products were cut and engraved glassware that featured greyhounds, which were a symbol of friendship. The greyhound motif was a favorite in French–made glassware.[73]

Benjamin Bakewell also got involved in sales downriver.[74] In addition to the western states, Bakewell worked to strengthen market share in eastern markets such as New York and Philadelphia.[75] Until 1819, Bakewell, Page & Bakewell had little or no domestic competition in the cut and engraved tableware business.[21] Major domestic competitors in the 1820s were New England Glass Company, Boston & Sandwich Glass Company, Brookland Flint glass Works, Jersey Glass Company, and Union Flint Glass Company of Philadelphia.[76]

While Benjamin Bakewell traveled often from 1820 through 1823, Thomas Bakewell and Benjamin Page remained in Pittsburgh for most of that time and ran the glass works.[77] In March 1823 the company expanded its facility and added a new furnace as part of a plan to sell more lower-cost tableware.[78] Page moved to Cincinnati in early 1823 to sell glassware and other items, but returned by September. During that month he renewed his partnership with Benjamin Bakewell, and Thomas Bakewell joined the partnership.[79] By 1824, the company was advertising "moulded glass".[80]

Prosperity returns

edit
 
Engraved tumbler featuring a greyhound by Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
Metropolitan Museum of Art
 
Sulphide Lafayette portrait in base of a glass tumbler made by Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Senator Henry Clay and Pittsburgh Congressman Henry Baldwin were supporters of the American System, which was an economic plan to nurture domestic industry by protective tariffs and improvements to the nation's infrastructure.[81] Bakewell promoted the American System with flasks and decanters that had American System inscribed on the glassware.[82] The flask was made of pressed glass decorated with a sheaf of rye on one side and a steamboat encircled with "The American System" on the other.[83] The American glass industry finally got relief from English imports with a protective tariff known as the Tariff of 1824.[84]

In 1824, Bakewell entered a set of decanters in the first Franklin Institute fair, and the decanters received honorable mention.[85] A year later, the Franklin Institute awarded Bakewell a medal for the best cut glass.[86] American Revolutionary War hero Marquis de Lafayette began touring the United States in 1824, and he arrived in Pittsburgh in 1825. Lafayette was presented two cut glass vases on May 31 after a tour of Bakewell's glass factory.[87] Bakewell produced commemorative tumblers to capitalize on Lafayette's popularity. A limited number of these tumblers were sulphide portrait versions, which had a portrait of Lafayette in its base.[88]

During 1825 Bakewell employed 61 glassworkers plus 12 engravers and ornamentors. About $45,000 (equivalent to $1,211,824 in 2023) worth of glass products were produced, and the plant's furnace consumed 30,000 bushels of coal.[89] During that year Bakewell sent a pair of cut and engraved celery glasses to Rachel Jackson, wife of Senator (and Battle of New Orleans hero) Andrew Jackson.[90][Note 10] This led to Jackson's purchase of Bakewell glassware for the White House after Jackson became President of the United States, and another purchase in 1832 for use at Jackson's home (The Hermitage) in Tennessee.[92] The Tariff of 1824 proved successful, as nearly 70 glass factories were started in the United States between 1820 and 1840.[84]

Mechanical pressing

edit

John Palmer Bakewell, son of Benjamin, applied for a patent on September 9, 1825, for an "improvement in making glass furniture knobs".[93] For many years, this was assumed to be the first mechanical pressing patent. Patent records between 1790 and 1836 were destroyed in a fire, so some uncertainty exists concerning who had the first mechanical pressing–related patent.[93][Note 11] At least nine patents related to pressing glass were filed by companies across the United States by the end of 1830.[95]

Although pressing glass by hand had long existed, mechanical pressing of glass did not exist until the 1820s.[93] The use of a machine to press glass enabled two workers to produce four times as much glassware as a group of three or four glassblowers.[96] Mechanical pressing reduced the time and labor necessary to make glass products, which resulted in lowered costs that made glass products available to more of the public.[97] One author called mechanical pressing "the greatest contribution of America to glassmaking, and the most important development since the Romans discovered glassblowing...."[96]

Middle years

edit
 
1830 advertisement for a seller of glass by Bakewell, Page, & Bakewell
 
Celery vase by Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
Metropolitan Museum of Art

John Palmer Pears, son of Thomas Pears and grandson of John Palmer, was hired in 1826 at the age of seventeen. He would become plant manager in 1835.[98] Another namesake of John Palmer and son of Benjamin Bakewell, John Palmer Bakewell, became a partner of the company in September 1827, which caused the company to be renamed Bakewell, Page & Bakewells. During the year Benjamin Bakewell Atterbury, a nephew of Benjamin Bakewell, was hired to work as a clerk at the company.[99][Note 12] Although the company still emphasized its luxury glassware, its ordinary goods carried the company financially.[101] In addition to its leadership in cut and engraved glassware, the company became a leading manufacturer of plain and molded tableware—including colored glass and pressed ware. It also made flasks and window glass.[21]

The Bakewell, Page & Bakewells partnership expired during September 1832. At that time Benjamin Page left the partnership and retired to Cincinnati. The company renamed itself Bakewells and Anderson. This partnership consisted of Benjamin Bakewell and his two sons, and Alexander M. Anderson—who was married to Benjamin's niece Sarah. This partnership lasted only until 1835, but the name was not changed until 1836. At that time the company name was changed to Bakewells and Company, and the partnership consisted of the three Bakewells.[102][Note 13]

The United States economy was not good during the late 1830s, and this caused Bakewells and Company to shut down its furnaces for four months during 1838. Although they shut their furnaces for only one week 1839, they asked some employees to work half time during 1840.[98] An 1841 business directory listed products as plain, cut, and pressed glassware. Other products were lamps, castors, bottles, flasks, vials, and window glass. The glass was sold from the company warehouse located at the corner of Wood and Second Streets. The glass plant was still called Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory, and it continued to be located at the corner of Grant and Water Streets.[103]

Bakewell dies

edit

The health of some members of the Bakewell family was deteriorating at this time. John Palmer Bakewell retired July 31, 1842, and he died less than four months later. Benjamin Bakewell, who had been active in the company despite being over 75 years old, died February 19, 1844, after a lingering illness.[104] Between the deaths of the two Bakewells, the company was reorganized effective August 1, 1842, as Bakewells and Pears. The partners were Benjamin Bakewell, Thomas Bakewell, and John Palmer Pears.[26] After the death of Benjamin Bakewell, the company was reorganized effective August 1, 1844, as Bakewell, Pears and Company.[104] Partners were Thomas Bakewell, John Palmer Pears, and Benjamin Page Bakewell.[26][Note 14] Thomas Bakewell led the new company.[36]

Big changes

edit
 
Portion of newspaper article about 1845 fire
 
Advertisement in 1856 city directory

In 1845 a massive fire in Pittsburgh destroyed over 1,000 buildings, including the Bakewell glass works and its warehouse.[106] The factory was rebuilt in 1846, and products consisting of green glass and flint glass were produced.[107] Thomas Bakewell continued his role as senior partner. While the old version of the company was a leader in cut and engraved crystal glassware, luxury goods were now only a small niche of the portfolio of glass products. Instead, the company relied upon mass-produced pressed glass.[108]

In 1854 the glass works was moved south across the Monongahela River to Bingham Street, between Eighth and Ninth Streets.[109] The new facility occupied the entire block with two ten-pot furnaces, a cutting and engraving shop, offices, and a showroom. The warehouse on the north side of the river (31 and 33 Wood Street) remained in use for another two decades.[110]

During August of the same year, Benjamin Bakewell Campbell joined the partnership. Campbell, who left his law practice, was a grandson of Benjamin Bakewell.[110] Unlike past changes in partners, the firm kept the same name. One can speculate that the name was kept the same to preserve brand identity, but the true reason is unknown.[111] In August 1859 Benjamin Bakewell Jr., son of John Palmer Bakewell, joined the partnership. Jacob W. Paul, brother-in-law of John Palmer Pears, became a partner in 1864—while Benjamin Page Bakewell retired in August. By 1865, the company was worth $500,000 (equivalent to $9,952,174 in 2023).[112]

Thomas Bakewell, senior partner of the company, died suddenly on May 30, 1866.[113] He had devoted 57 years to the glass business, and led the company since 1844.[110] John Palmer Pears, who joined the firm in 1842, became the senior partner.[70] Earlier, in 1864, William Leighton of the J. H. Hobbs, Brockunier and Company had discovered a new formula for glass. This new type of glass was called soda–lime or lime glass, and the glass produced was very close in quality to crystal—but without the costly lead additive. This type of glass gradually replaced lead crystal for high quality glassware.[114] Bakewell, Pears and Company adopted this new formula for glass, and they used improved soda that made better quality glass. They also continued to make lead-formula glass. Between 1868 and 1874, partners in the company also received patents related to pressing, molds, and encased (double or cased) glass.[115] Much of the company's tableware was made from pressed soda-lime glass. Glass made from lead was used to make lamps. The company also made blue glass, which was very popular at the time.[116]

Decline

edit
 
Advertisement in 1876 city directory

Jacob Paul retired in 1872, and John Palmer Pears died in 1874 at the age of 72.[117] An economic depression, which became known as the Long Depression and featured the Panic of 1873, started October 1873 and continued through March 1879.[118] For the period of 1870 through 1879, three years had no changes in consumer prices while the other years all had decreases (deflation) ranging from 2.9 to 9.4 percent.[119] It was difficult to sell glassware. In Pittsburgh alone, there were 41 flint glass works in 1876—but only 30 by 1880.[120] Bakewell, Pears and Company is known to have shut its furnaces down for at least some time in 1873.[121]

During this time, glass factories were trying to survive in an economic depression, and the three men deemed most responsible for the success of Bakewell were all dead. Those men were founder Benjamin Bakewell, his son Thomas Bakewell who was senior partner from 1844 until 1866, and John Palmer Pears who led the company from 1866 until 1874.[70] Glass man Deming Jarves, writing about Benjamin Bakewell, said "We may well consider Mr. Bakewell as the father of the flint-glass business in this country, for he commenced the work in 1808, and by untiring efforts and industry brought it to a successful issue".[29]

John Palmer Bakewell, who had the early patent related to mechanical pressing, had been dead since 1842. His son Benjamin Bakewell Jr became the senior partner upon the death of John Palmer Pears.[122] Effective August 1, 1874, Pears' share of the company went to his three sons: Thomas Clinton Pears, Benjamin Bakewell Pears, and Harry P. Pears.[26] The three brothers did not work well with Bakewell Jr, and preferred to work with a different grandson—Benjamin Bakewell Campbell.[122] Despite the hardships, Bakewell was still considered part of the elite of the industry. Major competitors were New England Glass Company, Boston & Sandwich, Boston's Mount Washington Glass, and Brooklyn's J.B. Dobleman.[123] By the end of 1877, the company reported revenue of $150,000 (equivalent to $4,291,875 in 2023) and employed 125 people.[116] Benjamin Bakewell Jr retired in 1878.[26] After a brief strike during July 1879, the company's lamps had strong demand. Both furnaces were melting glass in March 1880. Operations stopped in June because of the heat, and production did not restart until October.[124] During August the company had been reorganized as Bakewell, Pears & Company Limited with Campbell and the three Pears brothers as partners.[26] During March 1882 the works shut down permanently. Inventory and equipment were sold, and a wire making company used the plant site beginning in August.[125]

Talent provider

edit
 
Advertisement in 1883 trade magazine

Led by pioneering glass companies such as Bakewell, Pears and Company, Pittsburgh became the nation's glassmaking center by the 1850s. The city had nearby access to coal, good quality sand, and river transportation.[126] By 1850, Pennsylvania accounted for 40 percent of the glassmaking employees in the United States.[127] The 1880 United States census listed Pittsburgh's Allegheny County as the largest glass producer in the nation based on value, and its market share was 26.8 percent. The second place county had a market share of 7.7 percent.[128] Pittsburgh had become the world's glassmaking center, and it was the home of 44 glass factories.[129]

Numerous glass works were started by former Bakewell employees. Adams & Company was started by John Adams, who had worked as a presser at Bakewell. This company began in 1851 as Adams, Macklin & Company, and lasted until it joined United States Glass Company in 1891.[130] Brothers James Seaman Atterbury and Thomas Bakewell Atterbury, grandsons of Benjamin Bakewell's sister, joined James Hale to form Hale & Atterbury in 1860. This company was simply called Atterbury & Company for about 30 years, and lasted until the early 20th century.[131] The company's glass factory was called White House Works.[132] It manufactured flint glassware, lamps, chimneys, and bottles.[133] James had some work experience at the Bakewell glass works, as did the brothers' father, Benjamin Bakewell Atterbury.[100] Atterbury family members were involved with selling Bakewell products as early as 1830.[134]

James Bryce founded Bryce, McKee & Company in 1850 after working as a glassblower at Bakewell during the 1820s and 1830s. This glass works was eventually known as Bryce Brothers.[135] Former Bakewell employee David Challinor was involved in the startup of a glass works known as Challinor Taylor, although it was originally called Pittsburgh Glass Manufacturing Company from 1864 to 1870.[136] The Fort Pitt Glass Works was established around 1827 by Robert Curling and William Price. Curling had worked as a pot maker and a clerk at Bakewell. The firm was renamed R.B. Curling & Company in 1828.[137] McCully and Company was started by William McCully in 1829 as Hay & McCully. As an apprentice at Bakewell, McCully learned glassblowing.[138] Thomas Evans began his glassmaking career at Bakewell, and later formed Thomas Evans & Company. This company became one of the largest producers of chimneys for lamps.[139]

Notes

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ Benjamin Bakewell's wife's sister married John Palmer, who died in 1786 while their daughter was still a baby. Their daughter married Thomas Pears who later became a partner in a bottle project for Bakewell's glass company. Other family members who became partners in Bakewell's glass company include John Palmer Pears, Jacob W. Paul, Thomas Clinton Pears, Harry Palmer Pears, and Benjamin Bakewell Pears.[3]
  2. ^ Direct descendants of Benjamin Bakewell that became partners in his glass company include his sons Thomas Bakewell and John Palmer Bakewell, and Benjamin Bakewell Jr. (son of J.P. Bakewell). Benjamin Bakewell Campbell also became a partner, and he was Benjamin Bakewell's grandson through his daughter Nancy.[9]
  3. ^ An insurance description dated August 19, 1808, indicates the Bakewell (Bakewell and Ensell) glass factory was completed and operating.[18] The company was selling its glass by November 9, 1808, because it ran an advertisement in the local newspaper–and the works may have been in operation as early as February 1808 based on a newspaper notice concerning a glassmaking raw material.[21]
  4. ^ Pittsburgh's Bakewell glass company had nine different names. Bakewell, Pears & Company was the name used for the longest time. The names are:
     Bakewell & Ensell (1808–1809);
     Benjamin Bakewell & Company (1809–1813);
     Bakewell, Page & Bakewell (1813–1827);
     Bakewell, Page & Bakewells (1827–1832);
     Bakewells & Anderson (1832–1836);
     Bakewells & Company (1836–1842);
     Bakewell & Pears (1842–1844);
     Bakewell, Pears & Company (1844–1880); and
     Bakewell, Pears & Company, Ltd. (1880–1882).[27]
  5. ^ Because glass plants at that time melted their ingredients in a pot, a plant's number of pots was often used to describe a plant's capacity. The ceramic pots were located inside the furnace. The pot contained molten glass created by melting a batch of ingredients that typically included sand, soda, lime, and other ingredients.[30] For comparison purposes, Wheeling's Barnes, Hobbs, and Company had ten-pot, nine-pot, and five-pot furnaces in 1857.[31]
  6. ^ On the American east coast, Deming Jarves' New England Glass Company was not producing red lead using domestic sources until 1819.[43]
  7. ^ A member of the Pears family wrote that Benjamin Bakewell "had a very narrow escape from the English authorities", but only mentions Thomas Bakewell as having "succeeded in bringing back a number of workers."[50]
  8. ^ Black glass is black in color because manganese oxide mixed with iron oxide has been added to the glass ingredients. In some cases, black glass appears black in normal lighting, but is actually a very dark brown, green, blue, or purple.[56]
  9. ^ Thomas Pears worked as a bookkeeper for Bakewell in 1823 and 1824. In 1825, he moved with his family to an experimental community based on communism located in New Harmony, Indiana. He returned to Pittsburgh with his family in 1826, and is thought to have worked again at Bakewell. He died from pneumonia in 1832 after moving back into his house too soon after a flood. He was only 46 years old at the time of his death, and his wife died a few days later. Neither lived long enough to see their son, John Palmer Pears, become manager of the Bakewell glass factory.[70]
  10. ^ Celery was a luxury food during the early 19th century. It was usually brought to the dinner table in elegant ware.[91]
  11. ^ Henry Whitney and Enoch Robinson of New England Glass Company received a pressing–related patent in 1826; and Phineas C. Dummer, George Dummer, and James Maxwell of the Jersey City Glass Works received pressing and mold–related patents in 1828.[94]
  12. ^ At least two members of the Atterbury family, Benjamin Bakewell Atterbury and James Seaman Atterbury, worked for the Bakewells—and they were descendants of Benjamin Bakewell's sister Sarah.[100]
  13. ^ Alexander M. Anderson married Sarah Bakewell, daughter of Benjamin Bakewell's brother William.[100] Anderson was a partner in the Bakewell company during the early 1830s.[26]
  14. ^ Benjamin Page Bakewell was grandson of both William Bakewell (Benjamin's brother) and Benjamin Page, who was one of the company's founders.[105]

Citations

edit
  1. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 15–16
  2. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 18; Pears, III 1948, p. 62
  3. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 36–37, 195
  4. ^ a b c d Palmer 1979, p. 5
  5. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 16
  6. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 17
  7. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 19
  8. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 18
  9. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 195
  10. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 19; Pears, III 1948, p. 62
  11. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 19–20
  12. ^ a b Palmer 2004, p. 24
  13. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 23
  14. ^ "Confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, Pittsburgh, P.A." McConnell Library, Radford University. Archived from the original on February 21, 2024. Retrieved February 21, 2024.; Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 3
  15. ^ Skrabec 2011, p. 24
  16. ^ Killikelly 1906, p. 133; Palmer 2004, p. 24
  17. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 23–24
  18. ^ a b c d Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 30
  19. ^ Bakewell 1896, p. 90
  20. ^ Killikelly 1906, p. 133; Jarves 1854, p. 43; Palmer 2004, p. 22
  21. ^ a b c McKearin & McKearin 1966, p. 138
  22. ^ Skrabec 2011, pp. 18–19
  23. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 25; Killikelly 1906, pp. 133–134; Jarves 1854, p. 43
  24. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 25
  25. ^ Killikelly 1906, p. 134
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Palmer 2004, p. 14
  27. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 144; Palmer 2004, p. 14
  28. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 25; "Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory - Benjamin Bakewell & Co. (advertisement)". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette (Ancestry). June 29, 1810. p. 4. ...have recently enlarged their assortment of glassware...
  29. ^ a b c Jarves 1854, p. 45
  30. ^ Skrabec 2007, pp. 25–26
  31. ^ "Manufacture of Glassware in Wheeling (page 2 second column from left)". Wheeling Daily Intelligencer (from Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress). August 29, 1857. Archived from the original on July 20, 2023. Retrieved July 20, 2023.
  32. ^ Weeks & United States Census Office 1884, p. 86
  33. ^ Jarves 1854, p. 44
  34. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 26; "Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory - Benjamin Bakewell & Co. (advertisement)". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette (Ancestry). November 9, 1810. p. 4. ...have recently enlarged their assortment of glassware...
  35. ^ Knittle 1927, pp. 210, 307
  36. ^ a b Bakewell 1896, p. 50
  37. ^ Skrabec 2011, p. 20; Jarves 1854, p. 44
  38. ^ "Notice (column 3 near top)". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette (Ancestry). May 31, 1811. p. 3. The partnership heretofore existing...was dissolved....
  39. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 28
  40. ^ a b c Skrabec 2011, p. 19
  41. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 29
  42. ^ Scoville 1944, p. 197
  43. ^ Skrabec 2011, p. 20
  44. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 28–29
  45. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 30
  46. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 33
  47. ^ Bakewell, Page & Bakewell 1893, p. 28
  48. ^ "The Treaty of Ghent: Ending the War of 1812". American Battlefield Trust. 8 April 2024. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  49. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 35
  50. ^ Pears, III 1948, p. 62
  51. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 34; Palmer 2004, p. 37
  52. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 34
  53. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 38
  54. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 36
  55. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 43
  56. ^ Shotwell 2002, p. 41
  57. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 14; Palmer 2004, p. 34
  58. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 34
  59. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 36
  60. ^ Pears, III 1948, p. 64
  61. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 37
  62. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 39; Pears, III 1948, p. 65
  63. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 39
  64. ^ Gordon 2018, p. 47; "Gallery Talk with curator John Stuart Gordon: Material Culture of the Civil War and Reconstruction". Yale University Directed Studies. Archived from the original on May 31, 2024. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  65. ^ Gordon 2018, p. 47; Reif, Rita (March 17, 1985). "Antiques: Two Decanters Create a Stir". New York Times. Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  66. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 42
  67. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 42–43
  68. ^ a b Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 73
  69. ^ Pears, III 1948, p. 67
  70. ^ a b c Pears, III 1948, p. 70
  71. ^ Pears, III 1948, p. 68
  72. ^ "Glassware (advertisement)". National Banner and Nashville Whig. June 13, 1821. p. 1. ...will sell or barter on the most accommodating terms.
  73. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 46–47
  74. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 74
  75. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 48
  76. ^ Whitehouse 2012, p. 92; McKearin & McKearin 1966, p. 139
  77. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 45
  78. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 48–49
  79. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 45–46
  80. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 50
  81. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 50–51
  82. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 51–52
  83. ^ Shotwell 2002, p. 14
  84. ^ a b Dyer & Gross 2001, p. 23
  85. ^ Gordon 2018, p. 47
  86. ^ Pears, Jr. 1925, p. 200
  87. ^ Gordon 2018, p. 47; "Marquis de Lafayette". American Battlefield Trust. Archived from the original on May 21, 2024. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  88. ^ Palmer 1979, pp. 4, 9–10
  89. ^ Knittle 1927a, p. 206
  90. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 52–53; "New Orleans Chalmette Plantation". American Battlefield Trust. Archived from the original on July 8, 2018. Retrieved June 11, 2024.
  91. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 53
  92. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 71–72
  93. ^ a b c Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 42
  94. ^ Shotwell 2002, p. 444
  95. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 43
  96. ^ a b Zerwick 1990, p. 79
  97. ^ "Pressed Glass: 1825–1925". Corning Museum of Glass. Archived from the original on March 23, 2024. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  98. ^ a b Palmer 2004, p. 75
  99. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 63
  100. ^ a b c Palmer 2004, p. 194
  101. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 64
  102. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 14, 73
  103. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 73
  104. ^ a b Palmer 2004, pp. 14, 75
  105. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 14, 194
  106. ^ "Awful Calamity! City of Pittsburgh in Ruins". American Republican and Baltimore Daily Clipper. April 14, 1845. p. 1. ...from 1,000 to 1,200 buildings, of all descriptions...were reduced to ashes.; Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 144
  107. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 76
  108. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 76–77
  109. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 144
  110. ^ a b c Palmer 2004, p. 79
  111. ^ "Branding". American Marketing Association. Archived from the original on May 28, 2024. Retrieved June 3, 2024.
  112. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 14, 79
  113. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 79; Bakewell 1896, p. 50
  114. ^ Zembala & Clement 1973, p. 6
  115. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 81
  116. ^ a b Palmer 2004, p. 84
  117. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 14; "Local Briefs - Mr. John P. Pears". Pittsburgh Post (Ancestry). February 6, 1874. p. 4.
  118. ^ "US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions". National Bureau of Economic Research. Archived from the original on December 1, 2019. Retrieved 2023-03-31.; "Crisis Chronicles: the Long Depression and the Panic of 1873". Federal Reserve Bank of New York. 5 February 2016. Archived from the original on June 1, 2023. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
  119. ^ "Consumer Price Index, 1800-". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Archived from the original on August 25, 2020. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
  120. ^ Weeks & United States Census Office 1884, p. 88
  121. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 80
  122. ^ a b Palmer 2004, p. 85
  123. ^ Skrabec 2007, p. 73
  124. ^ Palmer 2004, pp. 85–86
  125. ^ Palmer 2004, p. 86
  126. ^ "Confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, Pittsburgh, P.A." McConnell Library, Radford University. Archived from the original on February 21, 2024. Retrieved February 21, 2024.; Skrabec 2011, pp. 19, 24
  127. ^ United States 1853, p. lxxi
  128. ^ Weeks & United States Census Office 1884, p. 11
  129. ^ Skrabec 2007a, p. 7
  130. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 142
  131. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 143
  132. ^ Shotwell 2002, p. 610
  133. ^ McKearin & McKearin 1966, p. 610
  134. ^ "Flint Glassware". Wheeling Compiler (from Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress). February 24, 1830. Archived from the original on June 6, 2024. Retrieved June 6, 2024.
  135. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, pp. 144–145
  136. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 145
  137. ^ McKearin & McKearin 1966, p. 598
  138. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 151
  139. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 30; "Thomas Evans & Co". Corning Museum of Glass. Archived from the original on September 25, 2023. Retrieved June 6, 2024.

References

edit

Further reading

edit
edit