Rendered at 23:29:57 04/29/25
Creamer Remembrance by PFALTZGRAFF Heigth 4 1/4 in Pink/Peach/White Flowers USA
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United States

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Seller handling time is 1 business day Details
No shipping price specified to GB
Ships from
United States

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OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
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Full refund available within 30 days
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PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Shipping options
Seller handling time is 1 business day Details
No shipping price specified to GB
Ships from
United States

Offer policy
OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
Details
Return policy
Full refund available within 30 days
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
---|---|
Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
Used |
Brand: |
Pfaltzgraff |
Color: |
Cream (Pink/Peach/White Flowers) |
Type: |
Creamer |
Pattern: |
Remembrance |
Style: |
Creamer |
Seller Notes: |
“Perfect Condition! Zero chips or use markings.” |
UPC: |
Does not apply |
Listing details
Shipping discount: |
Shipping weights of all items added together for savings. |
---|---|
Price discount: |
10% off w/ $75.00 spent |
Posted for sale: |
More than a week ago |
Item number: |
1363611736 |
Item description
Welcome to Hamclothingdesigns!
You are looking at...
Description: Pink, Peach White Flowers
Pattern: Remembrance by Pfaltzgraff
Status: Discontinued. Actual: 1988 - 2010
The Pfaltzgraff
Company
Learn more about
the Pfaltzgraff Story and Lifetime Brands
For over 200 years the Pfaltzgraff brand has been associated
with the highest quality ceramic products available for the home. The company
grew from a modest-size pottery shop that produced simple earthenware,
salt-glazed stoneware crocks and even flower pots into one of the best known designers
and marketers of dinnerware, drinkware, ceramic accessories, giftware and other
products. Several Pfaltzgraff patterns are among the best-loved dinnerware
designs in America, including Yorktowne, Folk Art, Naturewood and Pistoulet.
The Pfaltzgraff family immigrated to the United States in the
early 1800's and set up a small potter's wheel and kiln on their modest
twenty-one acre homestead in York County, Pennsylvania. The earliest
Pfaltzgraff market was defined to be "as far as you can get with a horse
and a wagon and then get back home the same day." Today you can find
Pfaltzgraff products in department stores, gift and specialty stores from coast
to coast. In addition, Pfaltzgraff products are available on this website.
In 2005 Pfaltzgraff joined the family of Lifetime Brands, Inc.
Lifetime Brands is a leading designer, developer and marketer of home products
by some of America's best known and most respected brands including
Farberware, KitchenAid, Hoffritz, Wallace, Towle, Sasaki and a host of
others. By joining Lifetime Brands, Pfaltzgraff is now able to offer its
customers a full assortment of innovative kitchen prep and cook tools, as well
as the world's finest dinnerware, drinkware and flatware for the table.
Pfaltzgraff has a long-standing tradition of excellence in
craftsmanship, quality and service. Today, like never before and like nowhere
else, this tradition extends to the finest, widest variety of home products
available in the best home brands. This commitment to being responsive to its
customers, and to adapting its products and policies to their ever-changing
needs, has enabled Pfaltzgraff to prosper for almost two centuries.
It Began With
a Voyage
Johann George Pfaltzgraff was born in Germany in the early
1800's. He learned the potter's trade, but because of a restrictive guild
situation he had trouble establishing himself. So he and his new bride Elenora
decided to emigrate to Pennsylvania, perhaps on the urging of a relative named
George Falsgraff who had been a potter there since 1811. Johann and Elenora
boarded the Brig Charles Ferdinand in Germany in May 1833 and arrived in
Baltimore, Maryland almost four months later. By 1835 they had established
themselves in George Falsgraff's home township of Conewago in York County. Look
at the two tax entries on the left. They are almost identical, detailing both
men as potters living on 21 acres in Conewago Township, and owning one cow,
presumably not the same one!
Johann George Pfaltzgraff was aware of the needs of the farmer
(a main occupation at the time) as well as the general community. He created
products such as pitchers, plates and mugs to meet domestic needs, as well as
utilitarian storage vessels like crocks, jugs and jars, which were necessary
for food preservation. He fashioned these simple wares out of the locally
abundant red clay. His family grew, and he taught his craft to his sons John,
Henry, George, Cornelius and Isaac. These first three would make names for
themselves as highly skilled potters.
In 1839 Johann George decided to grow his family business by
moving to Freystown, a small community that is now incorporated into the east
side of the City of York. The family remained there until 1848 when they moved
back to a more rural location north and west of town. Johann George's nephew
Henry Miller eventually purchased the Freystown Pottery. Four pieces of redware
attributed to Miller have survived. However, as part of a research project into
the history of The Pfaltzgraff Co., an archeological dig unearthed pottery
shards that could date back to Johann George, and confirmed the exact location
of the historic site.
Pfaltzgraff: The
Second Generation
By the time Johann George and Elenora Pfaltzgraff sold the
Freystown Pottery in 1848 they had seven children. They would have ten in all.
In 19th Century America, farmers and craftsmen relied on family members to
supply much-needed help in the fields or, in the case of the Pfaltzgraffs, in
the pottery. All five of Johann George and Elenora's sons would therefore
become skilled potters.
Upon Johann George Pfaltzgraff's death in 1873, his land was
divided among his widow Elenora and their children. The five sons, John,
George, Cornelius, Henry and Isaac, would continue as potters. There are no
known examples of the work of Cornelius or Isaac (who died at the young age of
twenty). The Pfaltzgraff archives, however, contain a rich collection of pieces
from the potteries of John, George and Henry.
The earliest known samples of Pfaltzgraff pottery are by John B.
Pfaltzgraff. An advertisement from an 1872 York newspaper claims that his
Manchester Pottery supplied "all kinds of earthenware." By this time,
however, John, George and Henry Pfaltzgraff had all begun to import (probably
from Ohio) higher quality clay than the local red clay. Their customers?the
farmers, merchants and small industries of South Central Pennsylvania?began to
favor stronger, salt-glazed stoneware pieces over their traditional
earthenware. The Pfaltzgraffs needed to adapt, or risk the future of their
potteries.
This ability of the Pfaltzgraffs to adapt and develop new
products and new manufacturing technology would be fundamental to the growth
and success of Pfaltzgraff potteries and businesses to the present day. As the
Pfaltzgraff brothers expanded their potteries and business horizons, the
nineteenth century Industrial Revolution was changing the United States from a
farm-based society to an urban, manufacturing-driven economy. And so, in 1889
George and Henry Pfaltzgraff created a partnership that would grow into the Pfaltzgraff
Company.
Our First Factory
In 1894 brothers Henry B. and George B. Pfaltzgraff joined
forces to create the first Pfaltzgraff company called simply "The
Pfaltzgraff Stoneware Co." and soon outgrew their home-based York pottery.
They decided to build a new, modern plant that would streamline production, and
to locate that facility on a railway line to expedite shipments to customers in
a wider geographic area. Up until that time a Pfaltzgraff potter's market had
been defined as the distance a horse and wagon could travel and still return
home within a day.
The following year the brothers constructed a three story plant
next to a railroad near the western outskirts of York City in south central
Pennsylvania. They added two additional buildings over the next eight years.
This comparatively large facility was the first "true" Pfaltzgraff
stoneware factory.
The first photograph shows factory employees standing in front
of and sitting upon a boxcar with the factory visible behind them. The
gentleman standing in the boxcar door, on the right, is George W. Pfaltzgraff,
son of George B. Pfaltzgraff. George W. would play a key role in the expansion
of the company in the twentieth century.
This first factory burned to the ground in 1906. The
Pfaltzgraffs managed to salvage some bricks and girders and used these
materials in the building of a new factory further west. The new "West
York" facility still stands today.
Everything we sell is 100% authentic,
genuine gear don't waste your time or
money on cheap bootlegs.
Feel free to ask us any questions.
All our items ship same day from Missouri before
3:00 PM
Added to your wish list!

- Creamer Remembrance by PFALTZGRAFF Heigth 4 1/4 in Pink/Peach/White Flowers USA
- 1 in stock
- Price negotiable
- Handling time 1 day.
- Returns/refunds accepted
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