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Pharmacy
- the mother of invention?
William
Cookworthy (1705-1780)
Cookworthy
is regarded as the father of the English porcelain industry

This
20th century cup and saucer
is a descendant of Cookworthy's
original porcelain
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William
Cookworthy was born in 1705, the son of a Quaker weaver from Kingsbridge
in Devon. When he was 14 years old, William was taken on as an apprentice
by Silvanus Bevan, a Quaker chemist and druggist based in London.
William, unable to afford the coach fare from Devon to London, made
the 200 mile journey on foot.
In
addition to his training in dispensing, Cookworthy also learned
Latin, Greek and French, and some metallurgy.
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In
1726, Bevan offered him a position in a new wholesale pharmacy business
in Plymouth. By 1735, they were partners. His late wife's brother
joined Cookworthy to form "Cookworthy and Company". It was about
this time that William began to spend time on chemistry and metallurgy
experiments.
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The
business flourished, supplying merchant ships in the busy port.
He even came into conflict with the Society of Apothecaries in London
in 1755 when he ignored the monopoly that Queen Anne had granted
to them in 1702 to supply Naval ships. However, he is said to have
entertained Captain Cook and Joseph Banks before they sailed in
Endeavour to Otaheite, in the Pacific Ocean, in 1769.
Cookworthy's
most famous achievement was his work at the pioneering stages of
the porcelain industry in England. It seems that he entered the
subject area by accident, having read a description of Chinese porcelain
manufacture written by a Jesuit missionary in the 1740s.
He
described that he was able to investigate further when three men
visited him from Virginia with samples of Virginian clay and porcelain
in 1745.
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William Cookworthy |
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The
visitors were keen to interest Cookworthy in importing the Virginian
clay to make porcelain in England, as was already happening in Bristol.
However, to make the Chinese hard paste porcelain, both kaolin (China
clay) and a harder variety called petuntse (China stone) were needed.
Cookworthy
decided to look for these minerals in England, and he found them
locally in Cornwall. They were known as Moorstone or Growan, and
Growan clay. Cookworthy began to experiment with these ingredients.
However, it took him until 1768 to file a patent specification,
and be granted Patent number 898 for "Making porcelain from Moorstone,
Growan and Growan clay."
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He
set up the Plymouth China Works with Thomas Pitt, Lord Camelford,
on whose estate he had found the minerals and produced the first
English hard paste porcelain. They primarily made decorated tea
services, jugs and vases. However, the business was not making a
profit in Plymouth, and it amalgamated with a pottery in Bristol.
Cookworthy made his cousin, Richard Champion, his manager of "William
Cookworthy and Company." In 1774, Cookworthy sold his interest in
the business and patent to Champion. Champion continued to buy the
ingredients for the porcelain from Camelford, and paid a royalty
to Cookworthy. Cookworthy and Bevan's apothecary shop, established
in 1735, continued as a pharmacy premise until 1974 when the last
proprietor retired.
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