Yep and the most recent overvieww is one by Byron and Paul Jung.
Byron finally finished his contract with the National Park Service,
Midwest Archeological Center, in Lincoln. He also published that
report as:
Sudbury, Byron
2009 Politics of the Fur Trade: Clay Tobacco Pipes at Fort Union Trading Post
(31WI17). Historic Clay Tobacco Pipes Studies, Research Monograph 2.
Phytolith Press, Ponca City.
He also did a section in there with Bill Hunt of tthe MWAC:
Sudbury, Byron, and William J. Hunt, Jr.
2009 Politics of the Fur Trade: Clay Tobacco Pipes at Fort Union,
North Dakota. In: Sudbury,
Politics of the Fur Trade: Clay Tobacco Pipes at Fort
Union Trading Post (31WI17).
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipes Studies, Research Monograph 2.
Appendix 1:143-173.
Then he did a short 8 pager with Paul Jung on an overview of the industry:
Sudbury, Byron and S. Paul Jung, Jr.
2009 United States of America Pipe Industry Overview. In: Sudbury,
2009, Politics of the Fur
Trade: Clay Tobacco Pipes at Fort Union Trading Post
(31WI17). Historic Clay Tobacco
Pipes Studies, Research Monograph 2. Appendix 3:185-193.
For those of you who do not know Paul, his 87, 96 and 2003 book length
studies are very important works in the study area:
Jung, S. Paul, Jr.
1983 Two New Jersey Pipe Molds. Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 2:67-71.
1986 An Akron Smoking Pipe Company Shipping Box.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 3:76-78.
1987 19th Century Patents, Designs and Trademarks for Tobacco Pipes
and Related Material
Issued by the U.S. Patent Office. 2 vols. A & B.
Privately Published, Bel Air, Maryland.
1988 American Clay Pipe Works, Inc., ca. 1915-1920 Catalog Reprint
With Accompanying
Company History. Privately Published, Bel Air, Maryland.
1996 John Taber and John Taber Jr., Two New England Clay Tobacco
Pipe Makers Pipemakers.
A Family History and Illustrated Catalog. Privately
Published, Bel Air, Maryland.
2003 The Archaeology of the Clay Tobacco Pipe XVII. Pollocks of
Manchester: Three
Generations of Clay Tobacco Pipemakers. British
Archaeological Reports,
British Series 352.
While Byron is not a professional archaeologist, he has done a lot of
work with the Oklahoma and Pennsylvaniia Archaeological Societies. He
just finished his Ph.D. in Soils this May.
Sudbury, Byron
1975 A Description and Comparison of Pamplin and Mogadore Hexagonal Stemmed
Milled Chesterfield Pipes. Quarterly Bulletin of
theArcheological Society of Virginia
30(1):18-25.
1976 White Clay Pipes From the Old Connellsville Dump, 36 FA 140.
SPAAC Speaks
12(1):23-46. Bulletin of the Allengheny Chapter of the
Society for Pennsylvannia
Archaeology.
1977a Comments on the Clay Tobacco Pipe Industry. Newsletter and
Bulletin of the
Westmoreland Archaeological Society Chapter of the
Society for Pennsylvannia
Archaeology, The Trowel 2(1):6-9.
1977b Another Pamplin Clay Tobacco Pipe Mold. Quarterly Bulletin of
theArcheological
Society of Virginia 31(3):133-135.
1977c History of the Pamplin Area Tobacco Pipe Industry. Quarterly
Bulletin of the
Archeological Society of Virginia 32(2):1-35.
1977d Comments on the "C. M. Watkins" Pipe, Artifact No. H.4-19, The
Hermantage.
Manuscript.
1978a Additional Comments on the History of Pamplin Clay Tobacco
Pipe Industry.
Quarterly Bulletin of the Archeological Society of
Virginia 33(2):65-69.
1978b Additional Notes on Alternative Uses for Clay Tobacco Pipes
and Tobacco Pipe
Fragments. Historical Archaeology 12:105-107.
1978c A Preliminary Report on the R. Bannerman Eagle Tobacco Pipe Manufactory,
Rouses Point, New York. Bulletin of the Allegheny
Chapter No. 1 of the Society
for Pennsylvania Archaeology SPAAC Speaks 8(1):1-20.
1979a A Dated Pamplin, Virginia, Pipe. Quarterly Bulletin of the
Archeological Society
of Virginia 33(3):109-117.
1979b Historic Clay Tobacco Pipemakers in the United States of
America. In, The
Archaeology of the Clay Tobacco Pipe II. The United
States of America, Peter Davey, editor.
British Archaeological Reports, International Series
60:151-341. Oxford.
1979c Tentative Evidence of Clay Tobacco Pipe Manufacture at the
Harr-Cochran Pottery
Site, 36-WM-206. The Trowel. Newsletter and Bulletin of
the the Westmoreland
Archaeological Society, Chapter 23 of the Society for
Pennsylvannia Archaeology.
1980a Historic Clay Tobacco Pipes Manufactured in the U.S.A. - A
Slide Collection.
Looseleaf Notebook and 60 slides, Privately printed,
Ponca City, Oklahoma.
1980b White Clay Pipes From the Old Connellsville Dump, 36 FA 140.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 1:23-46.
1980c Review of: Walker, Ian C., 1977, Clay Tobacco Pipes with
Particular Reference
to the Bristol Industry. Historical Archaeology 14:126-128.
1983 Sally Michaels: A Mid-Nineteenth Century North Carolina Pipe Maker.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 2:59-60.
1986a An Illustrated 1895 Catalog of the Akron Smoking Pipe Company.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 3:1-42.
1986b An Update on the Status of Pipe Manufacturing Sites at Point
Pleasant, Ohio.
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 3:60-62.
1986c Goedewaagen Pipes for Sale in a 1951 Wally Frank, Ltd. Catalog
Historic Clay Tobacco Pipe Studies 3:96-98.
2009 Politics of the Fur Trade: Clay Tobacco Pipes at Fort Union Trading Post
(31WI17). Historic Clay Tobacco Pipes Studies, Research Monograph 2.
Phytolith Press, Ponca City.
These are the only pipe references I have for Ned Heite:
Heite, Edward F.
1968 Memorandum of a Visit to Pamplin, Appomattox Co., 15 April, 1968.
1969 Pipe Industry Reflected in Tools. Quarterly Bulletin of the
Archeological Society
of Virginia 24(2):118-119. (December).
1970 An Eighteenth-Century Reed-Stem Pipe from Lancaster County.
Quarterly Bulletin
of the Archeological Society of Virginia 24(4): cover & 226. (June)
1971 Pipes From the Pamplin Factory in Appomattox County, Virginia.
Quarterly Bulletin
of the Archeological Society of Virginia 25(3):195-196.
1972a A Collection of Pamplin Pipes at Appomattox Old Courthouse.
Quarterly Bulletin
of the Archeological Society of Virginia 26(4):211-212.
1972b American Made Pipes From the Camden Site. Quarterly Bulletin
of the Archeological Society
of Virginia 27(4):94-99.
1994 The two clay pipe traditions. Society for Clay Pipe Research
Newsletter 42: 12-27
Hope this did not fall into the "Really More Than You Wanted To Know"
catagory but I got on a roll.
Mea Maxima Culpa. :-)
On Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 3:02 PM, Carl Steen <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> As many times as you have sent me 20 page replies to similar questions I will gladly relinquish the usage to you. My pipe papers are in a box somewhere, but didn't Byron Sudbury and others (as well as Ned Heite) do considerable research on Pamplin and other Virginia pipes? It was quite an industry at one time.
>
>
>
>
> Carl Steen
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Smoke <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 3:53 pm
> Subject: Re: Help with interesting effigy pipe (UNCLASSIFIED)
>
>
> We have found the "cherubic " types at Fontenelle Trading Post and
> Fort Atkinson, 1920-1827 (25WN9). I like that phrase - I plan to
> steal it. :-)
>
> Fontenelle Trading Post at Bellevue, 25-SY-26, complicated ownership history.
> Missouri Fur Company 1823-1824
> Joshua Pilcher 1824-1825
> Pilcher & Partners 1825-1828
> Lucien Fontenelle 1832-ca.1840
>
> It is similar to those produced by Gottfried Aust (1755-1771 &
> Christ-Krause (1786-1802) at Bethabara, North Carolina by Moravian
> potters (South 1965 & 1967). However, John Holland became the potter
> who took over Gottfried Aust’s pottery in nearby Salem, North Carolina
> and was known to have made pipes in 1920-1822 (Walker 1969:28). So I
> believe the two examples we have from the west bank of the Missouri
> date to 1822-23. Depends on how long they took to make the trip. I
> suspect both were personal property which came west with the owners
> and not for sale at the trading post or the sutlers store. Too few
> fragments of this type have been found.
>
> None of these style pipes I have seen from a known archaeological
> context have that "carved" appearance. That is a new one on me.
> Remember, this is America. Whatever is sucesssfully sold WILL be
> copied by other for sale. :-)
>
>
> On Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 2:12 PM, Carl Steen <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> I defer to Smoke on all things pipe related, but could this be a Pamplin pipe
> or some other Virginia pipe? The Anthropomorphic pipes in the CHSA volume are
> more cherubic...
>>
>>
>> Carl Steen
>>
>
>
> --
> Smoke Pfeiffer
>
> TERM LIMITS because the longer they are in, the more arrogant,
> self-aggrandizing, and corrupt they become.
>
> Nothing says "American Dream" like crushing debt and burdensome regulation.
>
>
>
>
--
Smoke Pfeiffer
TERM LIMITS because the longer they are in, the more arrogant,
self-aggrandizing, and corrupt they become.
Nothing says "American Dream" like crushing debt and burdensome regulation.
|