“Blanco” white
Since the at least the late 1700’s the British Army had been whitening belts and other personal equipment. For this they used a preparation made from pipe-clay – a very white clay when fired. Pipe-clay was plentiful around the country and was exploited extensively for making pottery as well as clay pipes. As such, a very cheap and workaday compound. And as with many nouns it became transformed into a verb – to pipe-clay leather.
John Needham Pickering, a Volunteer (predecessor of the Territorial) thought his family firm that produced polishing compounds and rouges for the cutlery trade, could produce something better than the traditional pipeclay for whitening the Slade Wallace buckskin equipment the Army then wore. They developed a pure white compressed block product that could, by the addition of a little water, be applied with a sponge, rag or brush. They sold it to the local Hillsborough barracks who adopted his product and their extra white webbing was admired and led to it’s adoption by the rest of the army. For ten or fifteen years a Blanco-pipeclay controversy went on in the barrack-rooms, and Blanco won.
The product was sold in cake form shown on this page as well as liquid and paste form in a squeezable tube. The period of production of the two other forms is unclear but with certainty after 1900.

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A pre-1900 zinc tin with splendid lid detail inscribed “Joseph Pickering & Sons – Sheffield”
and carries a Pickering trade mark of a decorated “P” inside a lozenge.
It is owned by Denise Wey who recounts it was given to her by her Grandmother as a keepsake who told her it had always been for whitening (and as a child she always whitened Denise’s shoes from it). Denise’s Great Granddad was with the Durham Light Infantry pre 1900, then only a boy (photo below) and her father remembers it being in her Great Grandmothers house, when he was a boy and always used for whitening.

Photo: Denise Wey

Photo: Denise Wey
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Come the Great War, if not before, Blanco was supplied to the forces in more utilitarian zinc tins that simply bore the word BLANCO on the lid. Blanco No. 100 was the paper wrapped mould only, sold as a refil1 for the tins and cost 1d; Blanco No. 101 was the mould supplied in a zinc tin complete with sponge and cost 6d; Blanco No. 102 was the mould supplied in a cardboard box with sponge and cost 3d. The mould in this period was of the original deep well style and bore the embossed legend of Joseph Pickering & Sons – Sheffield as well as the word Blanco.


Photo: StigRoadi

Photo: Mick Burgess
A post-1900 Blanco wrapper.
It proudly boasts of winning a silver medal in the 1889 Exposition Universelle Internationale, Paris. This was a significant event – the Eiffel Tower was the principal attraction. A large portion of the exhibit hall within the Palace of Mechanical Industries contained Thomas Edison’s electrical inventions, including various electric lamps for use in houses. Variations of the telephone also were shown. During the Paris Exposition Europeans were exposed to the phonograph for the first time.
Also the award of a Diploma of Merit from the Military Exhibition, London, is heralded.
Also can be seen on the illustration of the mould is the number of the registered trade mark of ‘Blanco’ – 91774

Photo: Mick Burgess
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As time went on the white Blanco product assumed the new shallow well style of mould, here seen in it’s civilian retail guise on the left:

Photo: StigRoadi
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The white Blanco product wasn’t without competitors, among them Snowene, Nugget and Meltonian.
Here is an advert from the Evening Post, Wellington, New Zealand 1898 that lists Blanco for White Shoes and Belts. A later New Zealand 1908 advert also lists Nugget, Blanco, Laura and Lilly White products for whitening boots and shoes.
