Mimbreño
China
1-800-652-8973
The
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway is celebrated in print, song and
film as the railroad that opened the Great Southwest. Stretching from
the Great Lakes to the Pacific Ocean, the Santa Fe brought white man's
civilization to some of the most spectacular scenery on the continent.
Along with the railroad came the legendary Fred Harvey Company, operator
of the Santa Fe's meal stops, hotels, and later, its dining cars.
Almost from its beginning,
the Santa Fe accepted the identity of the old west as its own. Its stations,
timetables, and trains reflected the Spanish and Indian cultures that
so fascinated the rest of the country. That tradition reached its zenith
in the stainless steel streamliner, "the Super Chief" of 1936.
Inside, the railroad spared no expense to make it the most luxurious train
in the nation. From engine to tail car, the decor was as authentically
native American as good taste and the carbuilder's art would allow.
Mary
Colter served both the Santa Fe and Fred Harvey as designer and Indian
art expert. Then 66 years old, Colter combed museums for suitably authentic
designs, deciding finally on motifs from the ancient tribes of the Mimbres
Valley. Like other elements of the train's interior, her china adapted
the Mimbres likenesses of birds, turtles and fish to contemporary life
without sacrificing the spirit or honesty of the originals.
The Onandaga Pottery
Company produced Mimbreno China from 1936 to 1970 exclusively for the
Santa Fe Dining Car Department. It was used on all of their dining cars
until the end of service in 1971, whereupon it became even more highly
coveted in the collector's market. Today, it is exceedingly rare.
Through special agreement
with the AT&SF Railway, Pipestone is recreating this historic china
to the same high standards laid down by Mary Colter. The designs are exactly
as on the originals, in the same shades of maroon with charcoal accents.
Our Mimbreno is the
same hotel grade, high-fire vitreous china used on the dining cars for
nearly a century. We have matched the shapes as closely as possible to
the prototype pieces and all ware carries the elaborate Santa Fe backstamp.
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