





Antique Queen Victoria Golden Jubilee Mug 1887 – Royal Arms, Trumpet Banner, Teal Leaf Vine, Square Handle, Victorian Earthenware England
Nearly a hundred and forty years old — and stamped on the base with a set of geographic coordinates that tie this mug to a specific place and a specific celebration.
This is not a generic souvenir. The latitude and longitude coordinates stamped on the base mark this as a civic commemorative — almost certainly commissioned by a particular town, parish, or local institution for distribution during their own Golden Jubilee celebrations in June 1887. Across Britain, towns organised street parties, bonfires, and church services for the Jubilee, and many commissioned their own commemorative mugs from Staffordshire potteries to hand out to schoolchildren, parishioners, or the local poor. These locally ordered pieces were produced in far smaller numbers than the commercial souvenirs sold in shops, and very few survive today with their provenance markers intact. The coordinates on this mug are an invitation to research — they point to the specific community that celebrated with this cup in hand.
The front carries the Royal Arms — the quartered shield of England, Scotland, and Ireland beneath the Imperial Crown — flanked by graceful teal-green leaf branches with red berries that wrap around the entire body. The colour palette is distinctive: where most Victorian commemoratives lean on red, blue, and gold, this one introduces a striking teal foliage that gives it an almost botanical freshness. Turn the mug over and the vine continues in an unbroken sweep from handle to handle.
Look inside and you'll find the best detail of all: "Jubilee 1887" inscribed on a blue trumpet banner beneath the Imperial Crown — a hidden fanfare that reveals itself only when you drink or tilt the cup. It's a playful piece of Victorian design, turning the simple act of finishing your tea into a small act of celebration.
Made in white earthenware with a square-section handle — the angular profile characteristic of mid-to-late Victorian industrial pottery — and a gold rim that shows the kind of honest wear you'd expect after fourteen decades. Overall crazing and light age patina are present, entirely consistent with earthenware of this vintage.
Details
- Type
- Commemorative Mug (civic/parish commission)
- Maker
- Staffordshire pottery (unidentified)
- Origin
- England
- Era
- 1887
- Subject
- Queen Victoria Golden Jubilee (50th year of reign)
- Shape
- Can mug with square handle
- Size
- Approx. 3 in (7–8 cm) tall
- Material
- Earthenware
- Decoration
- Polychrome Royal Arms, teal leaf vine, interior "Jubilee 1887" trumpet banner, gold rim
- Markings
- Latitude/longitude coordinates stamped on base
Condition
Good antique condition for a piece nearly 140 years old. Royal Arms transfer is bright and intact. Teal leaf decoration vivid on both sides. Interior "Jubilee 1887" trumpet banner clear and legible. Gold rim shows wear consistent with age. Overall crazing and light age patina present — expected and accepted for Victorian earthenware of this vintage. No chips, cracks, or repairs. Please review all photos as part of the condition record.
Backstamp & Pattern

- Maker
- Staffordshire pottery (unidentified)
- Era
- 1887
- Mark on base
- Latitude/longitude coordinates stamped on base
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 →More in Royal Commemoratives

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