1
Drinking fountain, Burslem
The wonderfully ornate drinking trough in the market square, Burslem.
Image: © David Stowell
Taken: 4 Nov 2006
0.01 miles
2
New Inn + bottle oven
The oven is at A G Hackney's Fountain Place Works and is photographed from Fountain Place. A modern picture
Image appears not to include the oven I would be grateful for news of its continued survival.
In 1988 the Potteries Heritage society published a list of the 46 surviving bottle ovens. I wonder what the number is nearly 20 years later.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: Unknown
0.01 miles
3
Memorial Drinking Fountain and the Duke William public house, Burslem
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 5 Jul 2024
0.02 miles
4
Sign for the Duke William public house, Burslem
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 5 Jul 2024
0.02 miles
5
The Duke William public house, Burslem
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 5 Jul 2024
0.03 miles
6
Burslem: Furlong Court
These flats are run by Brighter Futures providing accommodation and support for people with alcohol and/ or substance misuse problems
Image: © Jonathan Hutchins
Taken: 17 Jan 2016
0.03 miles
7
The New Inn, Burslem
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 5 Jul 2024
0.05 miles
8
Sign for the New Inn, Burslem
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 5 Jul 2024
0.05 miles
9
Josiah Wedgwood Memorial Institute
Location: The whole façade of the Wedgwood Memorial Institute, (currently a library), Queen Street , Burslem
Designed: 1863-69 - Foundation stone laid 26 October 1863; building opened 21 April 1869; School of Art and Science opened in October 1869; Free Library opened 1870; façade finished by November 1871
Commissioned by: public subscription
Architects: George Benjamin Nichols, Robert Edgar and John Lockwood Kipling
Image: © Steven Birks
Taken: Unknown
0.05 miles
10
Lucie Wedgwood Gates at Burslem
Location: Chapel Lane, Burslem - outside the Health Centre
Installed: 1998
Commissioned by: North Staffordshire NHS Trust
Architect: Philip Wootton
Blacksmith: Edmund Sveikutis
There are four separate panels in the gates,
each of which show figures outlined in steel and filled in with wire mesh
coloured in red, blue, yellow, green, orange, brown and white.
The hands decorating the plate and shaping the pot commemorate the ceramics industry and its significance in the industrial development of the area. Other motifs - the mother holding her baby, the crawling infants, and the obviously healthy children playing children - allude to community health services, past and present, available within the health centre.
Image: © Steven Birks
Taken: Unknown
0.05 miles