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Bakewell, Pears & Co.
FormerlyBakewell & Ensell
Benjamin Bakewell & Co.
Bakewell, Page & Bakewell
Bakewell, Page &   Bakewells
Bakewells & Anderson
Bakewells & Co.
Bakewell & Pears
Company typePrivate company
IndustryGlassware
Founded1808 (1808)
FounderBenjamin Bakewell, Edward Ensell
Defunct1888
Fateclosed and factory site sold
SuccessorBakewell, Pears & Company, Ltd.
HeadquartersWater and Grant streets (1808-1854); Bingham Street (1854-1888),
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Key people
Benjamin Bakewell, Benjamin Page, Thomas Bakewell, John P. Pears, John P. Bakewell
Productsblown and pressed glassware, including lead crystal, with cutting and engraving
Number of employees
??? (January 1891)

Bakewell, Pears and Company was a manufacturer of tableware, lamps, and bar goods. It began operations in Fostoria, Ohio, on August 8, 1888, on land donated by the townspeople. The new company was formed by men from West Virginia who were experienced in the glassmaking business, and their company was incorporated in that state in February of the same year. They were lured to northwest Ohio to take advantage of newly discovered natural gas that was an ideal low-cost fuel for glassmaking. The company name came from the New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad, commonly known as the "Nickel Plate Road", which had tracks adjacent to the new glass plant.

Northwest Ohio had a short "gas boom", starting in 1886 after the Karg Well was drilled near Findlay, Ohio. Local businessmen took advantage of the natural gas to lure new businesses to the town. Numerous businesses were started in the area, and collectively they depleted the natural gas supply by the early 1890s. On July 1, 1891, Nickel Plate Glass Company joined the United States Glass Company trust, becoming Factory N. The trust controlled more than a dozen glass plants that made tableware. Initially the trust did not get involved with Factory N's operations. An economic depression, also known as the Panic of 1893, began in January 1893. On August 12, 1893, the trust closed Factory N permanently. After attempts to restart the plant failed, the facility burned to the ground on August 28, 1895.

The glass works operated for nearly three years as the Nickel Plate Glass Company, and about two more years as Factory N of the United States Glass Company. It is remembered as one of 13 glass companies that produced in Fostoria between 1887 through 1920. Today, collectors value patterns made by Nickel Plate/Factory N now called 101 Pattern Glass, Columbian Coin, Double Greek Key, Frosted Circle, Richmond, and others. The company also made unique lamps that featured a patented double–screw that connected the base of the lamp to the lamp fount that held the kerosine.

History

In 1807 George Robinson and Edward Ensell began building a glass works along the Monongahela River in Pittsburgh. They depleted their funding before construction was completed, so the incomplete works was sold in 1808 to Benjamin Bakewell, Benjamin Page, and Robert Kinder and Company represented by Thomas Kinder.[1] The new company was known as Bakewell and Ensell, and consisted of Bakewell, Page, Ensell, and Robert Kinder and Company.[2] Mr. Ensell provided the glassmaking expertise, although Bakewell soon discovered that Ensell misrepresented his qualifications.[3] The factory's original furnace contained six pots.[4][Note 1] Ensell left the company in 1809, and the firm was renamed Benjamin Bakewell and Company.[7][Note 2] The three remaining principals continued with the company.[7]

Changes were necessary at the glass works because of a number of problems. The furnace for melting glass was badly constructed, the work force was not highly skilled and and was reluctant to train new employees, and some of the raw materials were delivered by wagon from places as far away as Philadelphia and New Jersey. Sand, a major raw material for glass, was obtained nearby—but it was low-quality and more suited for window or bottle glass than glassware.[7] Bakewell worked to solve his factory's problems. The furnace was replaced with a ten-pot version in 1810.[4] Better raw materials were found, and Bakewell was able to produce better quality glass.[9] 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.[10] In advertising, the company called its glass works the Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory.[11]

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."[12]

In 1814 another ten-pot furnace was added to the factory, which doubled its capacity.[4]

Notes

Footnotes

  1. ^ 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.[5] For comparison purposes, Wheeling's Barnes, Hobbs, and Company had ten-pot, nine-pot, and five-pot furnaces in 1857.[6]
  2. ^ Pittsburgh's Bakewell glass company had nine different names. 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);
    Bakewell, Pears Company, Ltd. (1880–1882).[8]

Citations

  1. ^ Killikelly 1906, p. 133
  2. ^ Bakewell 1896, p. 90
  3. ^ Killikelly 1906, p. 133; Jarves 1854, p. 43
  4. ^ a b c Jarves 1854, p. 45
  5. ^ Skrabec 2007, pp. 25–26
  6. ^ "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.
  7. ^ a b c Killikelly 1906, p. 134
  8. ^ Madarasz, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania & Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center 1998, p. 144
  9. ^ Jarves 1854, p. 44
  10. ^ Skrabec 2011, p. 20; Jarves 1854, p. 44
  11. ^ "Pittsburgh Flint Glass Manufactory (advertisement)". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette. June 29, 1810. p. 4. ...have recently enlarged their assortment of glassware...
  12. ^ "Notice (column 3 near top)". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette (Ancestry). May 31, 1811. p. 3. The partnership heretofore existing...was dissolved....

References