Baguley After the closure of the works in 1842, some of the craftsmen remained on site to continue manufacturing on their own. The most successful of these was the Baguley family, the most senior of whom Isaac Baguley had been a painter of porcelain who rose to be the manager of the painting and gilding department at the factory. Baguley decorated porcelain that was bought in as unglazed
biscuitware from other potteries. The classic brown Rockingham glaze was used, the rights to which Baguley had acquired after the closure of the pottery, with much use of gilding and occasional enamelling. Isaac Baguley died in 1855 and his son Alfred continued the business, moving from the Rockingham works to nearby
Mexborough in 1865, where he continued decorating bought-in porcelain until his death in 1891. Immediately after the closure of the works, Baguley used an identical backstamp to the Rockingham puce mark. This changed into a similar mark titled "Rockingham Works Baguley". However, later the mark changed to an unrelated device with "Rockingham Works Mexborough" (or "Mexboro") as the subtitle, except on works produced for the Fitzwilliam household which retained the griffin mark. Use of these marks together with the brown glaze and gilding on non-Rockingham shapes makes Baguley pieces easy to identify. They are interesting and valuable in their own right.
Bennington and other American ware spaniel figurine, "Rockingham Pottery",
Bennington, Vermont, 1850-1900 The famous brown earthenware glaze discovered by the Rockingham pottery was imitated by many potteries and made its way across the Atlantic to be used on many decorative and utilitarian pieces from a variety of U.S. potteries, the most famous of which was at
Bennington, Vermont. The name "Rockingham" is often used in the U.S. to describe the rather substantial brown-glazed earthenware output of these factories: Americans may be more familiar with its use in this context.
Jabez Vodrey and his family are notable for having made Rockingham-style ware in
East Liverpool, Ohio in the mid-19th century, while
Edwin Bennett was also producing it in
Baltimore. Many examples of this type of Rockingham pottery may be found in the East Liverpool
Museum of Ceramics. File:Match holder, John E. Jeffords & Co. Philadelphia City Pottery, c. 1870, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze - Flynt Center of Early New England Life - Deerfield, Massachusetts - DSC04174.jpg|Match holder, John E. Jeffords & Co. Philadelphia City Pottery, c. 1870, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze File:Inkwell, American or English, yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze, item HD 2014.4.209 - Flynt Center of Early New England Life - Deerfield, Massachusetts - DSC04181.jpg|Inkwell, American or English, yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze File:Pudding dish, Boston Earthenware Manufacturing Company, c. 1860, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze, HD 2014.4.159 - Flynt Center of Early New England Life - Deerfield, Massachusetts - DSC04169.jpg|Pudding dish, Boston Earthenware Manufacturing Company, c. 1860, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze File:Bowl, Boston Earthenware Manufacturing Company, Massachusetts, c. 1860, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, rockingham glaze, HD 2014.4.161 - Flynt Center of Early New England Life - Deerfield, Massachusetts - DSC04159.jpg|Bowl, Boston Earthenware Manufacturing Company, Massachusetts, c. 1860, lead-glazed yellow earthenware, Rockingham glaze
Copies Some copies are known from the late 19th and early 20th century, but these are rare and the late 19th century pieces are interesting and moderately valuable in their own right, especially those by
Samson. Often the backstamps do not look correct, and many are not known Rockingham shapes.
Modern "Rockingham" Since the name Rockingham had come to describe a particular style of porcelain, the name was used by other manufacturers in the 20th century for earthenware and porcelain pieces, some of which are approximately in the style of original Rockingham. Although some were never intended to be passed off as genuine Rockingham (for example
Paragon's "Rockingham" range of mid-20th century), other pieces are backstamped with a Griffin mark similar to the genuine product to the extent that the unwary could mistake them for originals. Give-aways are "Rockingham, England" and "Rockingham, Staffordshire" marks which are late 20th century and not genuine Rockingham. ==Notes==