Franklin D. Roosevelt: Stangl "Happy Days Are Here Again" Prohibition Repeal Pitcher and Mug Set.... (Total: 6 Items)
Description
Franklin D. Roosevelt: Stangl "Happy Days Are Here Again" Prohibition Repeal Pitcher and Mug Set.-1934. The Stangl Company, New Jersey. Porcelain. Pitcher: 7.5" H x 23" diameter. Mugs: 4" H x 13" diameter.
-One small chip on rim of pitcher, else fine.
These original 1934 Stangl porcelain pottery items, featuring caricatures of FDR and other prominent Democrats, are a humorous memento of Roosevelt's repeal of Prohibition at the outset of his first term as President. This lot includes one full light-brown set featuring a pitcher and four mugs, plus one additional green mug. The caricatures in the set are those of: FDR (pitcher and one mug); Vice President John Nance Garner; William McAdoo, son-in-law of Woodrow Wilson; and Maryland Governor Albert Ritchie (one mug each). The additional mug features FDR. This unusual set is a must for the collector wanting to cheer FDR's popular repeal.
More Information:
The extended description below was supplied by the consignor. We are making it available to our web bidders who are interested in more in-depth research and broader historical perspective. Please note that presentation (i.e. framing), lot divisions, and interpretations of condition and content may occasionally differ from our descriptions. Assertions of fact and subjective observations contained in this description represent the opinion of the consignor. These remarks have not been checked for accuracy by Heritage Auctions, and we assume no responsibility for their accuracy; they are offered purely to allow the bidder insight into the way the consignor has viewed the item(s) in question. No right of return or claim of lack of authenticity or provenance based upon this extended description will be granted.
TWO very rare FDR Stangl mug sets produced by Stangl Pottery in 1934 to commemorate the repeal of Prohibition and the hopeful days of the first term of Franklin D. Roosevelt as President of the United States of America. The first is a Stangl mug of FDR measuring 4" tall x 5" wide (including handle). The second is a four-piece set consisting of an FDR pitcher and four mugs. Entitled "Happy Days Are Here Again," the pitcher has a caricature of FDR and measures approximately 8" high x 11" wide (including its handle). The four accompanying mugs feature caricatures of FDR, Vice President John Nance Garner, Maryland Governor Albert Ritchie, and former Governor of New York and Democratic Presidential candidate Alfred E. Smith, each measuring 4" tall x 5" wide (including handle). Stangl Pottery has been known far and wide for its bright, colorful hand-painted dinnerware in ever-popular floral and fruit patterns. The company started in Flemington, New Jersey as Hill Pottery in 1814. Hill was a utilitarian potter, producing drain pipes and storage crocks and jars from Flemington's red earthenware clay. By the 1860s, the company had been acquired by Abram Fulper, who continued in the utilitarian pottery business, but produced primarily stoneware, rather than earthenware. By 1900, the company, now Fulper Pottery Company, was under the direction of William H. Fulper II, grandson of Abram Fulper. William H. Fulper II was responsible for the development and introduction of Fulper Pottery Company's now renowned Vasekraft art pottery in 1909. In 1910, he hired ceramic engineer Martin Stangl to develop new Fulper Pottery shapes and glazes. By 1924, Martin Stangl was vice president of the company, and was responsible for the introduction of America's first open stock solid-color dinnerware. Production had continued all along in the original Flemington factory until the 1920s when another small factory was built in Flemington and a large existing pottery facility in Trenton was acquired by the company. In 1929, the original factory in Flemington burned, so all production was absorbed by the other two facilities. In 1935, production was ceased at the small remaining Flemington location, and that building was utilized solely as a retail showroom for the company's ceramic products, becoming one of the Nation's first "factory outlets." By the 1940s, hand-painted dinnerware had become popular, augmented in 1942 with the introduction of Stangl's best-known product, hand-carved, hand-painted dinnerware. Stangl's dinnerware and artware was sold through over 3000 department, gift and jewelry stores across America. From the 1930s through 1978, Stangl's Flemington Outlet showroom was a keenly popular tourist destination. Folks traveled from far and wide to partake of the bargains in high-quality pottery offered there. During busy week-ends, there were often as many as 1000 patrons visiting Stangl's Flemington showrooms. Automobile clubs and tour bus lines often included the Stangl Outlet as an integral part of many road trips. Shopping at Stangl seems always to be remembered as delightful experience. Whether twenty, forty or even fifty years later, visitors recall with pleasure the original Kiln display, or searching through endless stacks of dinnerware for those wonderful Stangl bargains. By November 1978, Stangl Pottery ceased manufacturing and closed forever, signaling the end of a truly unique American folk-art product. A wonderful FDR and New Deal memento.
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