C1880

The Pottery Works of Messers. Fowler and Son, at Camperdown.

Scarce engraving of Fowlers Pottery which was located on the corner of Australia Street and Parramatta Road, Camperdown. The family business was started by Enoch Fowler (1807-79) founded a very successful pottery business, arriving on the ‘Adam Lodge’ from Londonderry, … Read Full Description

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S/N: ISN-NS-800124009–402116
(B005)
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Details

Full Title:

The Pottery Works of Messers. Fowler and Son, at Camperdown.

Date:

C1880

Artist:

Unknown

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured engraving.

Image Size: 

223mm 
x 175mm
AUTHENTICITY
The Pottery Works of Messers. Fowler and Son, at Camperdown. - Antique View from 1880

Genuine antique
dated:

1880

Description:

Scarce engraving of Fowlers Pottery which was located on the corner of Australia Street and Parramatta Road, Camperdown.

The family business was started by Enoch Fowler (1807-79) founded a very successful pottery business, arriving on the ‘Adam Lodge’ from Londonderry, Ireland, in 1837, on a government-assisted passage for skilled migrants. He had changed his age to 26, as people over 30 were not eligible, and during the four month voyage, his wife and child died.1 Fowler remarried in 1838 and opened a small pottery in Sydney, producing ginger beer bottles, jars and clay pipes at Parramatta Street, now Broadway. In 1848, the pottery moved to Glebe, and in the 1850s the business re-located to a five acre site at the corner of Parramatta Road and Australia Street, Camperdown. This is the view depicted here by John R. Roberts who was also an architect and surveyor. It is quite possible that Enoch Fowler commissioned Roberts to portray his thriving enterprise. The firm’s 25 employees were producing 800 meters of drainpipe a week with a new type of machine displayed at the Parramatta Agricultural Society Show in 1860. The business expanded rapidly in tandem with the growing city, and also produced fire bricks, tiles, chimney pots and all manner of pottery items.2 Enoch’s son Robert Fowler (1840-1906) went into politics, becoming Lord Mayor of Sydney in 1880. With the substantial estate left to him, he built a large home at 14 Australia Street, Camperdown, opposite his father’s house ‘Cranbrook’ which still stands today.

From the original edition of the Illustrated Sydney News.

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