Liz’s Crockery Corner. Marion here. This little soup plate is in the Kyber pattern and was made by the W. Adams company in Staffordshire some time in the 1890s.
In 1842, during the First Anglo-Afghan War, the Khyber Pass was the setting for one of the 19th century’s gravest military disasters; and then, 1878, it was the place where the British launched a new invasion of Afghanistan and the brief Second Anglo-Afghan War. When I look at this plate, I think of John Watson, the companion and chronicler of Sherlock Holmes. One of the things about Watson is that he is a veteran of that second war—one of the few survivors of his unit, gravely wounded in battle and, when Holmes meets him, still struggling to recover from his wounds and deal with what we today call PTSD. This, Watson’s war experience, is handled with great subtlety by Conan Doyle, at a time when war veterans were part of the daily landscape and when Britain was moving briskly to forget its Afghan adventures. This plate stands at a particular point in time: the war was just enough in the past that the name Kyber could seem hazily, romantically right for a china pattern; and just enough in the present that it was an effective back story for a sympathetic character. The first words Holmes said to Watson were: “You have been in Afghanistan, I perceive.”