When Benjamin Latrobe’s design for an American city’s first water pump house came to fruition in Philadelphia, artists recorded the event as if it were a classical landscape rather than a novel urban technological feature. John James Barralet’s image of the pump house included the foreground action of a lively two-seater gig and a covered wagon. It was designed to be sold as a print, but British ceramics manufacturers soon adapted the scene and added it to their production of wares featuring American towns and natural landscape wonders.

The Water Works Philadelphia
Manufactured by Job and John Jackson
Burselm, Staffordshire, England; 1831‒43
Transfer-printed,
lead-glazed earthenware (pink)
Bequest of Henry Francis du Pont 1966.0941
View of the Water Works at Centre Square Philadelphia
Designed by John James Barralet and engraved by
Cornelius Tiebout
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1812.
Museum purchase 1961.0009
View of the Water Works at Centre Square Philadelphia
Manufactured by Stevenson and Williams
Cobridge, Staffordshire, England; 1826‒27
Transfer-printed,
lead-glazed earthenware (blue)
Campbell Collection of Soup Tureens at Winterthur, gift of John T. Dorrance, Jr. 1996.0004.009