66 
YORKSHIRE POTTERIES, ETC. 
Electioneering and masonic mugs were made, as well as many 
others. Beautiful sauce boats in the shape of swans, fox’s masks, 
fish, etc., were turned out, also cream jugs in the shape of cows, 
some with maids milking and some without. Jardinieres of 
cornucopia form, elaborate tobacco pipes with the stem in several 
close round coils, fine tea-poys or tea-caddies, money boxes in the 
shape of plain and elaborate little cottages, and a thousand other 
articles quite beyond the scope of this paper to mention, much 
less to describe. 
Finely modelled and coloured figures such as those in Mr. 
Hurst’s Collection, representing “Neptune” and “Charity” were 
produced. 
In the summer of 1781, busts of John Wesley were exhibited at 
the Methodist Conference in Leeds. These were most probably 
Fig. 60. Bust of John Wesley. Mr. J. R. Triffitt’s Collection. 
copied from that modelled by Enoch Wood, of Burslem, in that 
year. The teachings of John Wesley had gained many adherents 
in Yorkshire, and the Leeds Pottery is said to have done a great 
trade in jugs, having upon them a black transfer print of the 
preacher, and as before mentioned, teapots having the same design 
were largely manufactured. 
A large figure of a horse with L.P. (Leeds Pottery) on one 
corner of the horse-cloth was made at an early date, and used by 
