Royal Commemoratives

Vintage King Edward VIII Accession Plate – Royal Navy Bicorne Portrait, Red Ensign Union Jack Flags, Blue Line Rim, Made in Britain 1936

Available

Most Edward VIII china remembers the coronation that never happened. This plate remembers the day the story began: Accession 21.I.1936. George V died late on the 20th of January at Sandringham — "the King's life is moving peacefully towards its close," said the evening bulletin — and the next day his eldest son was proclaimed Edward VIII at St James's Palace. Accession souvenirs were made only in the few weeks before coronation planning took over, and this reign allowed no second chance: 326 days later Edward abdicated for Wallis Simpson. A short production window inside a short reign — scarcer, in practice, than the famous "coronation that never was" pieces.

The portrait is the King as he wished to be seen: the sailor prince, Dartmouth-trained, in dark blue naval dress and bicorne hat with a star at his breast, framed in a gilt palm-frond oval beneath a garland of roses. The crossed flags flanking him are the Union Jack and the Red Ensign — the flag Canadians flew as their own until 1965, a familiar face on a plate now shipping from Ottawa.

A full 9 inches across with moulded scrollwork and a hand-drawn cobalt line rim, it displays like a proper wall plate rather than a small souvenir. The reverse bears a castle-and-shield trademark over Made in Britain — the maker's name too faint to attribute, honestly noted; with accession pieces, the date is the signature that matters.

This shop now holds the complete 1936 arc: this plate for the accession, the Grafton mug for the cancelled coronation, and the Empire plate for the brother crowned in his place.

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Details

Type
Commemorative Plate
Maker
Unattributed British maker (castle-and-shield trademark, Made in Britain)
Era
Early 1936 (dated on face; accession issue window January–May 1936)
Pattern
Naval portrait in gilt palm oval, rose garland, Red Ensign and Union Jack
Shape
Round, moulded scroll rim, hand-drawn cobalt line
Size
~9" / 23 cm diameter (measured)
Material
Earthenware
Markings
Three-towered castle over chequered shield, trade name reading "Ruwaha" (unrecorded, likely a retailer's or export mark), Made in Britain; impressed potter's code

Condition

Very good vintage condition for ninety years: a small brown spot at the upper rim and a shallow tan glaze nick at the lower left edge, with the faintest surface lines over the portrait visible only under close inspection. No cracks, chips through the body, or repairs; colours strong. Please review all photos as part of the condition record.

Backstamp & Pattern

Maker
Unattributed British maker (castle-and-shield trademark, Made in Britain)
Pattern
Naval portrait in gilt palm oval, rose garland, Red Ensign and Union Jack
Era
Early 1936 (dated on face; accession issue window January–May 1936)
Mark on base
Three-towered castle over chequered shield, trade name reading "Ruwaha" (unrecorded, likely a retailer's or export mark), Made in Britain; impressed potter's code

The base carries the maker's printed mark; the wording — especially “England” versus “Made in England” versus “Bone China” — together with any pattern or registration number are the main clues to its age.

Read the full backstamp & pattern guide →

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