Figure of the month

​Tiger Hunter

​Courtesy Nick Burton English Pottery
November 2020

Queen Victoria was also titled The Empress of India. India was a colony of Great Britain and hugely important for the trade that existed between those two countries. Major imports to Great Britain were cotton, sisal for making ropes, spices and precious gems.

A large number of Britons went to India with their families to seek their fortune, and sadly one of their leisure time pursuits was big game hunting for trophies to decorate their homes. Tiger hunting was rife and many thousands of tigers were killed. This is a very rare figure.

​The figure is 10 inches tall. See Harding Book Two, page 75, figure 1911. 

​Courtesy Nick Burton English Pottery

More Figures of the month

Tam O’Shanter and Souter Johnny

March 2026

This is a rare pair of early figures of Tam O’Shanter and Souter Johnny, characters in the Robert Burns play “Tam O’Shanter”, written in 1790.

A pair of giraffes

February 2026

This is a fine pair of Staffordshire giraffes, seated below palm trees, each approximately 5 ½” tall.  These figures are very rare, dating to approximately 1850. 

Old Age

January 2026

This is a fine pair of early Staffordshire figures portraying “Old Age”. They stand about 8 ¾” tall and date to about 1820. 

A pair of pointers

December 2025

This is a rare pair of Staffordshire foxhounds, pointers, or game dogs. Whatever one decides to call them, they are an unusual and very fine pair.

Reverand Edward Meyrick Goulburn

November 2025

This is a rare Staffordshire figure of the Reverand Edward Goulburn, standing approximately 11 1/2” tall and dating to about 1860.

Richard Cobden

October 2025

This is a rare Staffordshire figure of Richard Cobden, the English politician, economist, and leader of the effort to abolish the Corn Laws in 1846.

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