Category:Ucagco

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United China and Glass Company (UCAGCO) was an importer of dinnerware, tableware, glassware, and cabinet china ware with offices in New Orleans and New York. Beginning immediately after the end of World War Two and continuing well into the 1950s, Ucagco imported and distributed gift wares from Japan. Not all Ucagco pieces are back-stamped [[:Category:Made in Japan|"Japan" or "Made in Japan"]] but they did come with a red and silver foil sticker indicating the Ucagco name and the country of origin. These stickers were sometimes deliberately removed and sometimes came off when the cups and saucers were washed. Only those who were collected as cabinet cups will still bear their Ucacgo stickers.
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United China and Glass Company (UCAGCO) was an importer of dinnerware, tableware, glassware, and cabinet china ware with offices in New Orleans and New York. Beginning immediately after the end of World War Two and continuing well into the 1950s, Ucagco imported and distributed gift wares from Japan.  
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According to [http://www.gotheborg.com Jan-Erik Nilsson of the Gotheborg site on Asian ceramics], the company was founded in 1850 under the name Abe Mayer & Co. and distributed china and glass throughout the southeastern United States as well as in Central and South America. By the 1930s, the name was changed to United China and Glass Company and trade was expanded to other nations, a move that was curtailed when World War Two broke out. Immediately after the cessation of hostilities between the United States and Japan, the UCAGCO agent in Japan, S.A. Stolaroff, who was also a talented ceramics designer, signed the very first contract that alloed renewed imports from Japan. Stolaroff worked with a number of different Japanese potteries design the gift and table wares that bore the Ucagco name. Ucagco ceased operations as such in 1956, when it was sold to Sammons Enterprises in 1956, with Stolaroff as the company's president. Stolaroff retired in 1962.
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because Ucagco worked with a number of pottery companies in Japan, there is no one Ucagco backstamp; in fact, not all Ucagco pieces are back-stamped [[:Category:Made in Japan|"Japan" or "Made in Japan"]] at all, but those which were not stamped  did come with a red and silver foil sticker indicating the Ucagco name and Japan as the country of origin. These stickers were sometimes deliberately removed and sometimes came off when the cups and saucers were washed. Only sets that were collected as cabinet cups will still bear their Ucacgo stickers.

Revision as of 00:37, 9 August 2017

United China and Glass Company (UCAGCO) was an importer of dinnerware, tableware, glassware, and cabinet china ware with offices in New Orleans and New York. Beginning immediately after the end of World War Two and continuing well into the 1950s, Ucagco imported and distributed gift wares from Japan.

According to Jan-Erik Nilsson of the Gotheborg site on Asian ceramics, the company was founded in 1850 under the name Abe Mayer & Co. and distributed china and glass throughout the southeastern United States as well as in Central and South America. By the 1930s, the name was changed to United China and Glass Company and trade was expanded to other nations, a move that was curtailed when World War Two broke out. Immediately after the cessation of hostilities between the United States and Japan, the UCAGCO agent in Japan, S.A. Stolaroff, who was also a talented ceramics designer, signed the very first contract that alloed renewed imports from Japan. Stolaroff worked with a number of different Japanese potteries design the gift and table wares that bore the Ucagco name. Ucagco ceased operations as such in 1956, when it was sold to Sammons Enterprises in 1956, with Stolaroff as the company's president. Stolaroff retired in 1962.

because Ucagco worked with a number of pottery companies in Japan, there is no one Ucagco backstamp; in fact, not all Ucagco pieces are back-stamped "Japan" or "Made in Japan" at all, but those which were not stamped did come with a red and silver foil sticker indicating the Ucagco name and Japan as the country of origin. These stickers were sometimes deliberately removed and sometimes came off when the cups and saucers were washed. Only sets that were collected as cabinet cups will still bear their Ucacgo stickers.

Pages in category "Ucagco"

The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.

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