Debbie,
Below are some citations for sources on 19th and 20th century stoneware.
The list is by no means comprehensive, but it does have some very useful
sources.
David.
References
Bowen, William R. and Linda F. Carnes
1985Historical and Archaeological Investigations of an Atlanta Folk
Pottery: The Rolader Site. The Atlanta Historical Journal 28(4, Winter
1984-1985):19-37.
Burrison, John A.
1973Georgia Jug Makers: A History of Southern Folk Pottery. Ph.D.
Dissertation in Folklore and Folklife. University of Pennsylvania.
1975Alkaline-Glazed Stoneware: A Deep-South Pottery Tradition. Southern
Folklore Quarterly 39(4):377-403.
1979Clay Clans: Georgia's Pottery Dynasties. Family Heritage 2:70-77.
1983Brothers in Clay: The Story of Georgia Folk Pottery. Athens, Ga.:
University of Georgia Press.
Greer, Georgeanna
1981American Stonewares: The Art and Craft of Utilitarian Potters. Exton,
Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing.
Hough, Walter
1901An Early West Virginia Pottery. Pp. 513-521 in Annual Report of the
Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the Year Ending June
30, 1899. Report of the U.S. National Museum. Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office.
Possibly first published example of historical archaeology in USA.
Isaacs, Susan L.
1991Pots, Potters, and Patrons: The Ethnography, History, and Meaning of
Contemporary Pennsylvania Redware. Ph.D. Dissertation in Folklore and
Folklife. University of Pennsylvania.
Michael, Ronald L.
1977Stoneware From Fayette, Greene and Washington Counties, Pennsylvania.
Northeast Historical Archaeology 5(1-2):33-41.
Michael, Ronald L. and Phil R. Jack
1973The Stoneware Potteries of New Geneva and Greensboro, Pennsylvania.
Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 56(4):365-382.
Schaltenbrand, Phil
1995Stoneware of Southwestern Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of
Pittsburgh Press.
Zug, Charles
1986Turners and Burners: The Folk Potters of North Carolina. Chapel Hill,
NC: University of North Carolina Press.
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