Showing posts with label Shard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shard. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 February 2022

Found on the Folly - Shard - Plumbing not Penmanship

A little piece of Grahamstown right here at Jeppe Boys

At first I didn't want to blog about this shard that I found on Collard's Folly.  In the end I just want to share all that I've learned. I was once told that I am a wealth of useless information .... 


Here we go,

Well,.....this is the largest and heaviest shard that I have ever found.   Of course I had to pick it up and it is currently on my office windowsill.



This huge salt-glazed hunk of  pottery has a cursive name stamped into the clay "GRAHAMSTOWN 1/4".  This was an interesting find.

 Initially I thought that it was a piece of a salt glazed stoneware inkpot.



 The boys at Jeppe did write with pens dipped in ink for many years. A master stoneware inkpot was used by the teacher to fill up individual learner inkwell's that fit snugly into little round holes in wooden desks.


I showed the shard to Mrs Acton and she set me right.. It is in fact a piece of vintage sewage pipe made in Grahamstown.. (I did sanitise my hands after that conversation😁).  

They definitely don't make things like they used to.

I did some research and found that Grahamstown is well known for awesome clay deposits.

Grahamstown has the largest known deposits of good quality kaolin in South Africa. But the abundance of this useful white clay isn’t benefitting the community. If processing plants can be opened in Grahamstown, kaolin mining could help alleviate unemployment.

From 1990 most of the kaolin processing plants were closed down. At the moment Makana is mining 27% of South Africa’s kaolin and before 1990 it constituted 55%.

It is one of the top seven industrial minerals and has prospects for providing opportunities and  economic growth in Grahamstown.

Today kaolin mining is limited to mining in Grahamstown and quarrying which is restricted to only five mines.

These are AM Moss, East Cape Quarries, Strowan mining, Crousday and Makana Brick and Tile. Kaolin is extracted through open cast mining methods.

This type of mining is not labour intensive therefore an average of ten full time workers is sufficient to do the work.

Kaolin is a fine white clay produced by the decomposition of a group of rockforming minerals called feldspars.

It is used in the production of tiles, cosmetics, sanitary ware, tableware, paper, paint, rubber and  pharmaceutical products.


Discovered by accident

The salt glaze technique was discovered in about 1680 by a servant. There was an earthen vessel on the fire with brine in it to cure salt pork. While the servant was away the brine boiled over, the pot became red hot, and the sides were found to be glazed.


This piece of pottery could have been sold right here in Johannesburg.  Below is a very old advertisement I found.


So, not useless at all! I now know how salt glazing was invented.  Grahamstown has very good clay.  Most importantly, they didn't skimp on the plumbing when the school was built, they only used the good stuff!😁

Sources:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_glaze_pottery#:~:text=Their%20salt%20glaze%20technique%20was,were%20found%20to%20be%20glazed.

https://www.etsy.com/listing/1069390381/large-antique-late-19th-century?click_key=5649ef6692494359d408bd634385d88c02fa4f9d%3A1069390381&click_sum=516ce9fc&ga_order=most_relevant&ga_search_type=all&ga_view_type=gallery&ga_search_query=salt+glazed+ink+pots&ref=sr_gallery-1-5

https://www.olx.co.za/
https://grocotts.ru.ac.za/2010/09/09/kaolin-mining-underexploited-in-grahamstown/#:~:text=Grahamstown%20has%20the%20largest%20known,mining%20could%20help%20alleviate%20unemployment.




Tuesday, 14 September 2021

Found on the Folly - Interesting Jeppe History - Can Glass be wired?

Yes, it can !!😁 I found this interesting glass shard on the Folly.

Piece of Georgian Wired Glass.  The wire mesh is actually embedded.

Initially I thought that this glass shard (with a square pattern) was a broken piece from a vintage fridge rack.

It is actually wired glass (safety glass).

Wired glass (sometimes referred to as Georgian wired glass or GW glass) was patented by Frank Shuman in 1892.  Wired glass typically has a grid size of around 12.5mm and is used as a low-cost fire resistant glass in which the wire holds the glass in place if high temperature causes it to break.

An example of wired glass

Frank Suman also built the world's first solar thermal power station in Egypt



Ironically they called it safety glass, it is actually very dangerous and the use banned in some countries

Dangers of Safety Glass

"American television broadcast company CBS reported on the dangers of wired glass during an evening news show, mentioning an aspiring basketball player who, after attempting to block a shot, ran straight into a wired glass window and put his hand through it. His injuries subsequently ended his basketball career as he lost the full use of his hand."

I'm not sure where this glass was used at Jeppe Boys in the past.  Luckily I haven't seen it anywhere else on the property.


Click on the links below to read more about the history of wired glass and the dangers.

Sources:

Kefallinos_kk2769_HP_Thesis_2013%20(1).pdf

ttps://sashwindowspecialist.com/blog/history-patterned-window-glass/

https://sashwindowspecialist.com/blog/history-patterned-window-glass/

https://tbspoly.com/alternatives-to-georgian-wired-glass/

https://www.glassonweb.com/article/shattering-myth-wired-glass

https://idighardware.com/2013/01/addressing-the-hazards-of-traditional-wired-glass/

https://www.pinterest.com.au/pin/586593920197619090/                                

Thursday, 13 May 2021

Found on the Folly - Shard - Beautiful pink Depression Glass shard found

 Found this shard at the bottom of the Folly, on the bank facing the Hockey Astro.


Gigantic pink glass shard found on the Folly



Shard Identification

Found it!  It's a shard from a Pink Old Cafe Depression Glass Vase.  This vase dates to 1940 making this shard 81 years old.  I wonder who owned this vase?


What is Depression Glass?

I have found many shards of depression glass on the Folly.  They date mostly from 1929 to 1939, from the Depression Era.  This type of glass was very cheap to make because it was moulded.  It was made in interesting colours and patterns.  Cheap to buy, sometimes the items were given away for free.  It was produced in America and Canada.

How to spot Depression Glass? Air bubbles in the glass and visible seams. 



                                                      Depression glass vase made by by Anchor
                                                      Hocking, circa 1930-1940
                                                      Design:  Old Cafe (Clear)

https://www.depressionelegantglass.com/cafe-depression-glass-hocking-ribs-wide-thin/


Or the shard could be from this lamp below


                                                      Vintage Anchor Hocking Old Cafe Pink
                                                      Depression Glass Electric Lamp Circa
                                                      1938-1940

                         

Which one do you think?


Thursday, 6 May 2021

Folly-Larking with Nirvana 5 May 2021

Well spotted Nirvana!  When "folly-larking" with me yesterday, Nirvana spotted a beautiful blue shard.  It had the words CHAS.    "......  CHEMI ........." embossed on it.


                                                        Blue shard spotted by Nirvana Sookdev, 5 May 2021


Well of course I did some research.  The blue shard is from a Chas Phillips Milk of Magnesia Cobalt Blue Glass Bottle, Circa, 1930's - late 1950's (I think), The Chas. H. Phillips Chemical Co. Glenbrook Conn.  Made in the USA.  

https://sha.org/bottle/pdffiles/MilkOfMagnesia.pdf










Old Boy and his Dad saved rare tiles from Old Tsessebe House

Jeppe Old Boy, Mark Thomas grew up in Friedenheim (Old Tsessebe House).  His father Mr. D. Thomas was a past Deputy Principal and past Head ...