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Teapot

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made in Barvas, Lewis, Outer Hebrides

Teapot
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This red earthenware teapot was made in Barvas, a crofting township on the west coast of the the Isle of Lewis, the northernmost island of the Outer Hebrides. It imitates contemporary tableware then becoming available from Clyde and Staffordshire potteries and was made for sale to tourists. It dates from around 1880.

The pieces have been made with a gritty clay dug from coastal glacial deposits and 'fired' in the peat on the central hearth of a thatched house.

For centuries it was the land which supplied the resources of everyday life for most people in Scotland. Earthenware was originally made from local clays and it was not until the middle of the 18th century that domestic pottery began to be mass-produced on an industrial scale.

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