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Best Staffordshire

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Cannock Chase

Cannock Chase is a significant upland heathland area within Staffordshire, England. Designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty since 1958, it preserves distinctive grassland and woodland landscapes. The site supports diverse wildlife and offers opportunities for recreation and scientific st...

2 Titanic Plum Porter

Titanic Plum Porter is a dark ale brewed by the Titanic Brewery in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, England. The beer is brewed using plums and is recognized for its fruity, roasted flavor profile characteristic of the porter style. It has historically received multiple awards from the Campaign for Real Ale...

3 Kinver Edge

Kinver Edge is a significant stretch of exposed sandstone ridge and heathland located in Staffordshire, UK. The area’s geological formation creates unique rock-cut caves, some of which were historically inhabited. These caves and the surrounding heathland are now managed by the National Trust and of...

4 Newport Pottery (Clarice Cliff)

Newport Pottery, based in Staffordshire England, represents a pivotal moment in British ceramics. Established by Clarice Cliff, the workshop produced the “Bizarre” range from 1934 to 1962. These hand-painted pieces are notable for their distinctive Art Deco designs and vibrant color palettes. The po...

5 Minton
Minton

Minton is a Staffordshire pottery founded by Thomas Minton in Stoke-on-Trent in 1793, renowned for its majolica wares, encaustic floor tiles, and fine bone china supplied to the British Royal Family.

6 Susie Cooper Pottery

Established in 1929, Susie Cooper Pottery is a Staffordshire firm renowned for its elegant, modern bone china tableware designs that heavily influenced 20th-century British interiors.

7 Spode
Spode

Spode is a Staffordshire pottery founded by Josiah Spode in 1770, credited with perfecting bone china and popularising the blue-and-white transfer-printed willow pattern in England.

8 Titanic Stout

A stout from Titanic Brewery in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, named in honor of Captain Edward John Smith of the RMS Titanic, who was born in nearby Hanley in 1850.

9 Cheddleton Flint Mill

Cheddleton Flint Mill is a Staffordshire mill complex with two watermills, including a late-18th-century mill built to grind flint for pottery.

10 Moorcroft Pottery

Moorcroft Pottery is a Staffordshire studio pottery founded by William Moorcroft in Burslem in 1913, celebrated for its hand-tubed, slip-trailed floral designs under distinctive flambe and matt glazes.

11 Highgate Common

Highgate Common in Staffordshire, England, is a heathland and country park notable for its breeding populations of rare ground-nesting nightjars.

12 Brindley Water Mill

Brindley Water Mill is a Scheduled Monument in Leek, England, built in 1752 by engineer James Brindley and restored as a museum in the 1970s.

13 Copeland (W.T. Copeland & Sons)

Succeeding the Spode works in 1833, W.T. Copeland & Sons was a prominent Staffordshire manufacturer recognized for its fine bone china and pioneering developments in Parian ware.

14 Royal Doulton

Royal Doulton is a British ceramics manufacturer founded in Lambeth, London in 1815, noted for its stoneware, fine china, and iconic figurine collections including the HN series launched in 1913.

15 Gentleshaw Common

Gentleshaw Common is a surviving tract of lowland heath in Staffordshire, England, protected for its globally rare and threatened wet heath habitats.

16 Brindley's Mill

Brindley's Mill in Leek, Staffordshire, is a restored 18th-century watermill associated with pioneering canal engineer James Brindley, now preserved as a heritage museum in his name.

17 Wetley Moor Common

Wetley Moor Common is a notable area of lowland heath and peat bog in Staffordshire, England, legally protected as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

18 Bretby Art Pottery

Bretby Art Pottery was a Derbyshire manufacturer founded in 1883 by Henry Tooth and William Ault, noted for its innovative metallic and cloisonné-effect glazes popular during the late Victorian Art Pottery movement.

19 Masons Ironstone

Masons Ironstone is a Staffordshire pottery established by Charles James Mason in 1813, notable for patenting ironstone china, a hard, durable white earthenware body widely used for large decorative pieces and tableware.

20 Beswick
Beswick

Beswick is a Staffordshire pottery founded in Longton in 1894, best known for its highly detailed ceramic animal figurines, including the Beatrix Potter character series produced from 1948.

21 Carlton Ware

Carlton Ware is a Staffordshire pottery produced by Wiltshaw & Robinson from 1890 in Stoke-on-Trent, noted for its lustre-glazed Art Deco decorative wares and novelty tableware shaped as fruit and vegetables.

22 Titanic Lifeboat Ale

Copper-coloured best bitter from Titanic Brewery in Stoke-on-Trent, England, one of the brewery's core range ales named after the ship's lifeboats.

23 Ridgway Pottery

Founded in Staffordshire in 1792, Ridgway Pottery was a major manufacturer of earthenware and porcelain, highly influential in the early development of multi-color transfer printing.

24 Davenport Pottery

Founded in Staffordshire in 1794 by John Davenport, this pottery works became a prominent manufacturer of high-quality earthenware, stone china, and finely decorated porcelain.

25 Gray's Pottery

Established in Staffordshire in 1907 by Albert Gray, Gray's Pottery was highly regarded for its hand-painted earthenware tablewares imported from Europe and decorated in England.

26 Burleigh (Burgess & Leigh)

Burgess & Leigh, trading as Burleigh, is a Staffordshire pottery established in Burslem in 1851, one of the last manufacturers to produce traditional blue-and-white transfer-printed earthenware using original engraved copper plates.

27 Crown Devon (S. Fielding & Co.)

Crown Devon, produced by S. Fielding & Co. in Stoke-on-Trent from 1879, is known for its brightly coloured Art Deco decorative pottery, novelty musical jugs, and lustre-glazed ornamental wares.

28 Adams (William Adams & Sons)

William Adams & Sons was a prominent English pottery manufacturer founded in Tunstall, Staffordshire, in 1779, recognized for producing durable ironstone, jasperware, and earthenware.

29 Crown Ducal (A.G. Richardson)

Established in Tunstall in 1915 by A.G. Richardson, Crown Ducal is best known for its stylish 1930s art pottery and distinctive tubelined designs created by designer Charlotte Rhead.

30 Wade Ceramics

Wade Ceramics is a group of British potteries based in Burslem, Staffordshire, widely recognised for the miniature Whimsies figurines introduced in 1954 and later distributed as novelty premiums in Red Rose Tea.

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