03/28/2026
From the University Guild Art Collection: Dedham Pottery, American, c. 1898, 8” x 5” Ceramic
Dedham Pottery began with a moment of inspiration. In 1876, at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, Hugh C. Robertson (pictured below) encountered Chinese ceramics with a shimmering, crackled glaze. The experience so inspired him that he developed his own crackle glazing process.
Back home in Dedham, Robertson experimented until he developed what he called “craquelware,” a distinctive crackle glaze that would become the signature of Dedham Pottery. Each piece carried a quiet tension between control and chance, as fine lines spread unpredictably across the surface, giving the pottery its unmistakable character.
For decades, the Robertson family sustained the company, building a reputation for refined American art pottery. But its story took an abrupt turn in 1942, when Robertson’s grandson left to serve in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Before departing, he closed the business and sold off the remaining inventory in a remarkable half-price sale at Gimbels—a quiet, almost unceremonious ending for such an influential workshop.
Yet Dedham Pottery didn’t disappear. Today, its delicate crackle glaze and understated elegance have made it highly prized among collectors.
Here in Scott Hall, the University Guild’s Dedham Pottery collection—generously donated by Mrs. Frank Farnsworth, John H. Wigmore, Mrs. Wigmore, and Mrs. Howard Irvin—keeps that story alive. What began as a moment of curiosity at a world’s fair now endures, piece by piece, in the quiet presence of these objects.
-Kay Burlingham, Art Collection Director