Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 139, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Billy Waters

Figure
1820-1830 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Billy Waters was one of several black beggars and street entertainers in early 19th-century London who were immortalised in art and literature. Having served in the British navy, during which he lost a leg, he settled with his family in the London parish of St Giles. He supplemented his meagre pension by busking and begging, particularly outside the nearby Drury Lane Theatre. He was noted for his peg-leg and feathered hat, and is instantly recognisable in a print by George Cruikshank published in Pierce Egan's Life in London (1821). This book was adapted as an operatic extravaganza by W. T. Moncrieff that was performed at the Adelphi Theatre in 1821. It included the character of Billy Waters. He, however, gained nothing from the publicity and died in the workhouse in 1823 at the age of 45. He had reputedly been elected 'King of the Beggars' shortly before his death. He was buried in the New Burial Ground, St Pancras church.

Images of Billy Waters fit into long-standing traditions both of representing sailors and buskers and street-sellers via prints of 'The Cries of London'. The inclusion of real-life black personalities in these images is a reflection of the presence of black people among the London poor. This is one of several ceramic figures of Waters, and one of two in the V&A Museum (see C.317-1916). Several versions of this particular model were made in Staffordshire in the 1820s, one of which can be attributed to the major manufacturer Enoch Wood of Burslem. The modelling of this example, however, is unusual in having an almost white face. This is probably because it was made in a small factory, whose modellers misinterpreted their uncoloured engraved print source. It could even have been made as late as 1836, when similar figures of Thomas Dartmouth Rice playing the black character 'Jim Crow' on the London stage became popular.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleBilly Waters (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Lead-glazed earthenware with enamel decoration
Brief description
Figure of a Billy Waters in lead-glazed earthenware with enamel decoration, Staffordshire, 1820-1830.
Physical description
Figure of a Billy Waters in lead-glazed earthenware with enamel decoration. He wears a feather-plumed hat. He is depicted as a one-legged beggar playing the violin, waving his wooden leg in the air, and his dog is in front of him with a hat in its mouth. All on a square plinth.
Marks and inscriptions
'WATERS'
Gallery label
Figure of Billy Waters Several versions of this figure were made in Staffordshire in the 1820, one of which can be attributed to the major manufacturer Enoch Wood of Burslem. The modelling of this example, however, is unusual in having an almost white face - indications of a small factory whose modellers misinterpreted their uncoloured engraved source. It could even have been made as late as 1836, when similar figures of Thomas Dartmouth Rice playing the black character "Jim Crow" on the London stage became popular.(October 2002)
Credit line
Purchased through the Julie and Robert Breckman Staffordshire Fund
Subjects depicted
Summary
Billy Waters was one of several black beggars and street entertainers in early 19th-century London who were immortalised in art and literature. Having served in the British navy, during which he lost a leg, he settled with his family in the London parish of St Giles. He supplemented his meagre pension by busking and begging, particularly outside the nearby Drury Lane Theatre. He was noted for his peg-leg and feathered hat, and is instantly recognisable in a print by George Cruikshank published in Pierce Egan's Life in London (1821). This book was adapted as an operatic extravaganza by W. T. Moncrieff that was performed at the Adelphi Theatre in 1821. It included the character of Billy Waters. He, however, gained nothing from the publicity and died in the workhouse in 1823 at the age of 45. He had reputedly been elected 'King of the Beggars' shortly before his death. He was buried in the New Burial Ground, St Pancras church.

Images of Billy Waters fit into long-standing traditions both of representing sailors and buskers and street-sellers via prints of 'The Cries of London'. The inclusion of real-life black personalities in these images is a reflection of the presence of black people among the London poor. This is one of several ceramic figures of Waters, and one of two in the V&A Museum (see C.317-1916). Several versions of this particular model were made in Staffordshire in the 1820s, one of which can be attributed to the major manufacturer Enoch Wood of Burslem. The modelling of this example, however, is unusual in having an almost white face. This is probably because it was made in a small factory, whose modellers misinterpreted their uncoloured engraved print source. It could even have been made as late as 1836, when similar figures of Thomas Dartmouth Rice playing the black character 'Jim Crow' on the London stage became popular.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Pugh, P.D.Gordon. Staffordshire portrait figures and allied subjects of the Victorian era. London : Barrie & Jenkins, 1870. 657 p. illus. ISBN 0257650652, pp. 382-3.
Collection
Accession number
C.38-2002

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Record createdNovember 15, 2002
Record URL
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