The 2019 edition of Ceramics in America will feature groundbreaking discoveries for students of American ceramic history. New analytic information about the manufacture of hard-paste porcelain, also in the Philadelphia context, will be of special interest to students of American porcelain production. Reconstructive drawings of two of America’s most important potteries and their kilns are illustrated and discussed: the William Rogers Pottery of Yorktown, Virginia (ca. 1720–1745), and the massive stoneware kilns of Abner Landrum’s Pottersville factory in Edgefield, South Carolina (ca. 1818–1840). Other articles examine topics of American stoneware, including the distinctive eighteenth-century stoneware of Boston and Charlestown, Massachusetts. The journal concludes with a beautifully illustrated two-part presentation on clay tobacco pipes made in the Chesapeake region of America between 1640 and 1660, highlighting the pipe maker’s art and the multicultural circumstance of their manufacture and use.
The Search for the Green‑Glaze Potter of Philadelphia
Deborah Miller
Geochemistry of 18th-Century Hard-Paste Porcelain Artifacts Excavated in Philadelphia
J. Victor Owen, Evan M. Owen, John D. Greenough, Deborah Miller, Brandon Boucher, and Robert Hunter
Ronald W. Fuchs II One of the Earliest Pieces of Chinese Porcelain in Virginia
Ronald W. Fuchs II
A Manhattan-Made Native American Portrait Jug
Robert Hunter
Eighteenth-Century Boston Stoneware: Appealing to a Local Market
Lorraine German
“The Picture of the Old Pottery”
Benjamin B. Edmands, transcription by Lorraine German
Visualizing the Stoneware Potteries of William Rogers of Yorktown and Abner Landrum of Pottersville
Robert Hunter and Oliver Mueller Heubach
Creolization of the Northeastern Woodland American Clay Stemmed Tobacco Pipe
Taft Kiser and Al Luckenbach
Making Pipes: Experiments to Learn Things We Don’t Know We Don’t Know
Taft Kiser and Al Luckenbach