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HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 10 Dec 2010 09:16:17 -0600
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Tim: I posted this to the Tobacco Related Artifacts Group on
ArchaeoSeek last August 27th.  It had already made the rounds of all
of the clay pipe and tobacciana researchers.  Ben Rapaport -
Antiquarian Tobacciana (pipe historian / author and top purveyor of
Tobacco related books in this country) has a blurb about it in his
latest quarterly newsletter.  It is number 4 on his list of virtual
pipe/tobacciana museums.  I can sendd it to anyone who might like it.

It never hurts to give a great set of webpages like this the widest
possible distribution, though!  :-)

Smoke

On Thu, Dec 9, 2010 at 9:13 PM, Baumann, Timothy E <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Online Type Collection for Pamplin Pipes -
> http://anthromuseum.missouri.edu/minigalleries/pamplinpipes/pamplinpipes.shtml
>
> Pamplin Clay Tobacco Pipes
>
> Clay tobacco pipes are a common artifact type found in historic Euro-American archaeological sites. These inexpensive and disposable items were generally manufactured, used, and thrown away within a very short span of time, and individual styles can often be traced to specific manufacturer and period of production. Thus, clay pipes can serve as a valuable tool in helping to date a historic archaeological site.
>
> Clay pipes imported from England typically have a small bowl and long stem and are made of kaolin (a fine, white clay); this type of pipe is common to Colonial-period archaeological sites. A number of different kinds of clay pipes were also produced locally. A common type produced in the eastern United States in the 18th and 19th centuries has a comparatively large bowl with a short stem into which a longer stem (usually of reed) was inserted. The area of Pamplin, Virginia, is one the localities where this type is known to have been produced in large quantities. Manufactured by individual pipemakers beginning in about 1740, and by the Pamplin Smoking Pipe and Manufacturing Company, which operated from 1878 until 1951, pipes from the Pamplin area are distinguished by the high-quality, deep red, local clay from which they were made. The Akron Smoking Pipe Company of Ohio also owned a plant in Pamplin from 1890 to 1920, and produced Pamplin-type pipes during that time period.
>
> In 1972, Missouri avocational archaeologists Henry and Jean Hamilton published an article about Pamplin pipes that remains the definitive source on the subject. The Hamiltons examined 4,451 pipes from the Pamplin area (recovered from the Pamplin Company’s factory grounds and from the site of a local store that sold home-industry pipes) and identified 39 styles that represented the majority of pipe forms produced in the Pamplin area from the mid-18th to mid-20th centuries. The Hamiltons’ personal Pamplin pipe type collection, which includes examples of most of these forms and is now housed by the University of Missouri's Museum of Anthropology, is presented in its entirety in this online exhibit.
>
> References and Related Links
> Hamilton, H. and J. Hamilton. 1972. Clay pipes from Pamplin. Missouri Archaeologist 34(1–2):1–47.
> Historic Clay Tobacco Pipes
> Hume, I. 1969. A Guide to Artifacts of Colonial America. New York: Random House.
> Sudbury, B. 1986. An illustrated 1895 catalogue of the Akron Smoking Pipe Co. Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 3:1–42.
> Sudbury, B. 1979. Historic clay tobacco pipemakers in the United States of America. The Archaeology of the Clay Tobacco Pipe II: The United States of America. British Archaeological Reports International Series 60:151–341.
> Text prepared by Mary French, winter 2006.
> Photos by Charmagne Thompson.
>



-- 
Smoke Pfeiffer

Proud member of the "angry mob".
We Begin.

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