
William W. Stickney
2841 Olive Street
General Agent and Incorporator — St. Louis Stoneware Company
108 North Fifth Street
Born: January 16, 1830
Enfield Center, Grafton County, New Hampshire, USA
Died: January 21, 1899 (aged 69)
Saint Louis, City of St. Louis, Missouri
Buried: Bellefontaine Cemetery
Saint Louis, City of St. Louis, Missouri
William Wier Stickney occupied a significant though largely overlooked place within the industrial growth of post–Civil War St. Louis. In 1875, he resided at 2841 Olive Street while serving as General Agent for the St. Louis Stoneware Company, whose offices stood at 108 North Fifth Street in the city’s busy wholesale and mercantile district. More importantly, surviving contemporary records reveal that Stickney was not merely an employee or salesman of the concern, but one of its original incorporators and founding organizers.
Born on January 16, 1830, in Enfield Center, Grafton County, New Hampshire, Stickney belonged to the generation of New England businessmen who moved westward during the great commercial expansion of the nineteenth century. By the time he appeared in St. Louis business circles, the city was emerging as one of the principal industrial and transportation centers of the American interior.
The St. Louis Stoneware Company was organized in December 1865, only months after the conclusion of the Civil War. The timing itself is revealing. Across the nation, cities and industries entered a period of rapid reconstruction, modernization, and expansion. St. Louis, strategically positioned upon the Mississippi River and increasingly connected to western rail systems, stood poised for extraordinary growth.
According to contemporary descriptions, the company was founded with a substantial capitalization of $100,000 — a considerable industrial investment for the period. The incorporators were identified as Stephen Partridge, William W. Stickney, and Elliott T. Merrick. This was not a modest artisan pottery shop, but a serious manufacturing concern operating on an industrial scale.
The company’s works stood at the southeast corner of Seventh Street and Russell Avenue, consisting of a substantial two-story brick manufacturing complex extending seventy-five feet along Seventh Street and one hundred forty feet along Russell Avenue. Additional stables and storage yards occupied adjoining property. Steam power operated the works, placing the enterprise firmly within the mechanized industrial world transforming St. Louis during the late nineteenth century.
Perhaps most importantly, the St. Louis Stoneware Company manufactured far more than ordinary household crocks and pottery. Its products included:
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Sewer pipe
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Industrial linings
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Chimney tops
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Stoneware utility products
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Commercial ceramic materials