I'd be very surprised if you don't turn up examples of Mogadore/Akron pipes
as well.
Below are the chief references:
Hamilton, Henry W., and Jean Tyree Hamilton
Clay Pipes from Pamplin. The Missouri Archaeologist 34(1-2): 1-47.
Murphy, James L.
Clay Tobacco Pipes from the Tom Peterson Site (33CT390), Clermont County,
Ohio. Proceedings of the Symposium on Ohio Valley Urban and Historic
Archaeology. 3: 61-71, 1985
Additional Reed Stem Smoking Pipes from Summit County, Ohio. The
Chesopiean 18(1-2): 16-31.
Reed Stem Tobacco Pipes from the Point Pleasant, Clermont County, Ohio.
Northeast Historical Archaeology. 5(1-2): 12-27, 1976
Nineteenth Century Reed-stem Tobacco Pipes from the Mogadore, Ohio, Dump.
Pennsylvania Archaeologist. 44(4): 52-60, 1974
Provenience of Seven Reed Stem Pipes from Fort Union, New Mexico. The Kiva.
39(3-4): 247-251, 1974
Murphy, James L., and Kurt Reich
Mold Marks on Mogadore, Ohio, Reed Stem Tobaccop Pipes. Quarterly
Bulletin, Archaeological Society of Virginia 28(2): 94-96.
Nineteenth Century Reed-stem Tobacco Pipes from the Mogadore, Ohio,
Dump. Pennsylvania Archaoelogist 44(4): 52-60.
Sudbury, Bryon S.
History of the Pamplin Area Tobacco Pipe Industry. Quarterly Bulletin,
Archaeological Society of Virginia 32(2): 1-35.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Makers 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.
An Illustrated 1895 Catalogue of the Akron Smoking Pipe Co. Historic Clay
Tobacco Pipe Studies 1: 1-42.
Thomas, B. B., and Richard M. Burnett
A Study of Clay Smoking Pipes Produced at a Nineteenth Century Kiln at
Point Pleasant, Ohio. Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers
1971. 6: 1-31.
Byron Sudbury's BAR report remains the best introduction. I am currently
writing up recently discovered pipes from the Merrill and Akron Marble Co.
potteries in Akron.
Jim
At 07:13 PM 4/25/2002 +0800, David Stinson wrote:
>I was informed yesterday that I must research clay pipe fragments found at
>Fort Harrison in Indianapolis. They are mostly Point Pleasant and Pamplin
>pipes. Is there a definitive work on these types of clay pipes? All the
>literature I've found deals with tavern type pipes of white clay. Thanks, Dave.
>--
>
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