The Fortune Cup

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From the Land of Tea

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SnowhiteRegency Meredith Fortune Cup!


In keeping with the Winter theme of warm tea and tea-leaf reading, this week's offering is a genuine rarity, the Snowhite Regency Fortune Cup containing 52 playing cards and made by the Johnson Brothers Pottery of England for an extremely elusive couple named Verna A. and John W. Meredith, who copyrighted the cup in the U.S.A. and promptly disappeared. Cartomancy tea cups are not common, but this cup is so hard to find that in all my years of collecting, i have only seen it put up for sale twice, once in 2011 without a saucer, and once in 2017 as a complete cup and saucer set. These images will eventually be on display at the Mystic Tea Room web site. As a Patreon supporter, you have access to them one full year before the public does.

To place this work in context, please read the following introductory pages




The Fortune Cup

The Fortune Cup, copyright 1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith, Snowhite Regency Made in England by Johnson Brothers Ironstone; side view
The Fortune Cup, copyright 1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith, Snowhite Regency Made in England by Johnson Brothers Ironstone; interior view view
The Fortune Cup, center of the cup, showing the handwritten copyright notice "1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith," in the glaze
The Fortune Cup, backstamp, Snowhite Regency Made in England by Johnson Brothers Ironstone
The 1965 copyright notice for "The Fortune Cup [Cross of Playing Cards] Drawing

The Fortune Cup is the somewhat generic name given to a rare cartomancy cup and saucer set created by Verna A. Meredith and John W. Meredith, which bears a copyright date of 1965. It was manufactured in England for the Merediths by the large Johnson Brothers pottery on their popular 1960 Snowhite Regncy swirl shape, and was probably decorated in one of the company's plants in America or Canada.

This colourful made in England decorative cup has all 52 cards on the inside. It is signed by Verna A. and John W. Meredith 1965. It has no chips, cracks or marks anyw It has some manufactured slight imperfections which do not affect the look or condition of the cup. It has gold like trim on the rim and handle and a swirl like pattern on the outside of the cup.

I have not found any newspaper or magazine advertisements for The Fortune Cup by this husband and wife team, but they were definitely American, not British, because in 1965 they took out an American copyright on "The Fortune Cup" name and a drawing, which was subtitled "Cross of Playing Cards." The copyright notice reads as follows:

MEREDITH, JOHN W.
The fortune cup. See MEREDITH, VERNA A.
MEREDITH, VERNA A.
The fortune cup. [Cross of playing cards] Drawing. © Verna A. & John W. Meredith; 12 May 65; GU3863O.

The contents of the copyrighted "Cross of Playing Cards Drawing" is unknown to me, but one guess is that the drawing depicts a card layout of some kind. There are quite a few "Cross" layouts used by fortune tellers, from the Celtic Cross to the Cross of Fifteen, but without the picture itself, it is impossible to know what was intended, or how this drawing relates to the actual tea set shown here, beyond the obvious fact that they were both released the same year.

The rarity of the Meredith Fortune Cup comes about because it was not a regular issuance from the [:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] pottery and was not marketed by them. Instead -- like the Zancigs Cup of Destiny, made by the Anchor Pottery; Genevieve Wimsatt's Chinese Fortune-Telling Teacup, made by the Canonsburg Pottery; and the Creative Art Products Romany Cup of Fortune, made by Cavitt-Shaw -- this was a custom job, designed by, and delivered to, a small home-based business, in this case, Verna A. and John W. Meredith. Who they were and where they lived is still a mystery, but if more information comes to light, you'll see it here.

DIV-TLR-FOME

catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room


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