Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Ryan McDougall

19th century ceramics recovered from shipwreck to go on display

Pottery was recovered from the SS Eagle shipwreck (Graeme Bruce/PA) -

A rare collection of 19th century ceramics recovered from a shipwreck is to go on display for the first time.

The SS Eagle sank off the Isle of Arran on November 28, 1859 after colliding with a sailing boat, with the loss of 11 lives.

The ship was sailing from Glasgow to Londonderry with a general cargo, 200 sheep and 54 passengers when the collision happened.

The ceramics, discovered by Oban-based diver and maritime explorer Graeme Bruce and team in July 2024, were made by Glasgow-based Bell’s Pottery.

During the 19th century Glasgow was a major centre for the production of ceramics, and the items from SS Eagle will form part of the Scottish Maritime Museum’s summer exhibition from Saturday.

Mr Bruce said: “Diving has been my great passion for 35 years. For me, a shipwreck is a time capsule hidden from view over time by the sea.

“The privilege of being able to explore and connect with the past is beyond description.

Diver Graeme Bruce, who recovered the pottery from the shipwreck. (Graeme Bruce/PA)

“Enabling the artefacts from shipwrecks like this Bell’s Pottery collection to then have a new life on show for everyone to learn from and appreciate is so important.

“Connecting people with a heritage like this means everything to me and those I dive with.”

The Beneath The Waves exhibition at the museum in Irvine, North Ayrshire, brings together the ceramics, award-winning photography and an artist’s marine sketches.

Bell’s Pottery is recognised as arguably the most internationally significant producer of ceramic wares in Scotland at the time.

The haul from the SS Eagle is almost intact, which museum bosses say is unprecedented.

Experts said this, coupled with the lack of surviving pottery from Glasgow’s industrial ceramics period, which spanned three centuries from 1748 to the mid-1980s, makes the SS Eagle’s ceramic tableware nationally significant.

The SS Eagle collection features ceramics destined for trade and exhibition in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, and artefacts from the ship’s galley.

A ceramic bowl found on the SS Eagle shipwreck, off the coast of Lamlash, Arran. (Graeme Bruce/PA)

Exhibits include seven plates and a bowl, a teapot lid, two bottles, a decanter and bell.

Complementing the SS Eagle ceramics, Beneath The Waves also features cups and plates from the Scottish Maritime Museum’s own national maritime heritage collection, as well as four vessels dating back to the Roman Empire on loan from North Ayrshire Heritage Centre.

The SS Eagle launched from the Dumbarton yard of Alexander Denny in July 1857.

The 324-tonne steamer was acquired by the McConnel and Laird Line of Glasgow in June 1859 for service as a passenger and cargo vessel.

Eva Bukowska, exhibitions and events officer at the Scottish Maritime Museum, said: “We are really excited to host the first showing of these fascinating ceramics recovered from SS Eagle.

“The vessel also has a significance for the museum as it was built by Alexander Denny, who was the brother of William Denny, whose test tank is now home to our second collection in Dumbarton.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.