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Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955

Toby Fillpot sugar bowl modeled by Ernest T. Bailey and produced by Burgess & Leigh of Burslem, England, circa 1955 using its Burleigh Ware tradename. A drinker of excessive quantities of strong ale, Toby Philpots is a merry chap, habitually found occupying his favorite corner at the inn or pub with a foaming pint in his hand. A notorious Yorkshire toper named Henry Elwes was known as Toby Fillpot for having consumed 2,000 gallons of stingo, a strong ale. The name Toby Philpot appeared in a song, "The Brown Jug," written by Francis Fawkes and published in 1761, which told of a jolly toper who excelled at boozing and died "full as big as a Dorchester butt," and whose remains were formed into the jug of the title. A mezzotint produced soon thereafter by Bowles and Carver featured the song accompanied by a caricature of a sitting toper with a ruddy complexion and huge belly. Historians theorize that this juxtaposition of song and print coterminous with the development of the ceramic corpulent, seated toper pitcher is the origin of the name Toby Jug. Note the hat as a lid for the sugar bowl. This is part of a tea service set along with a teapot and creamer, or toby jug.

Maker:

Burgess & Leigh

England

circa 1955

Model #:

Derivative

sugar bowl

Size:

medium

Height:

4 1/4"

Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
Toby Fillpot sugar bowl - Burgess & Leigh circa 1955
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