2. southern folk pottery of north carolina
DESCRIPTION
Contermporary Ceramic HistoryTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
North CarolinaPottery
traditional pottery of the southERN USA
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 2: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
★SeagroveCatawba Valley
★Asheville★
Cherokee★
★Lincoln County
Old Salem★
Major pottery Regions of N.C.
North CarolinaPottery
TextText
ACADEMIC FOLK IMMIGRANT NATIVE AMERICAAN
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 3: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
The ceramic history of North Carolina begins with the abundant and diverse natural clay deposits found there.
Abundant earthenware and stoneware clay deposits are found in areas across the state.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 4: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 5: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 6: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 7: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Native Americans in this region were first to use clay as a resource.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 8: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
★
North CarolinaPottery
★
Major pottery Regions of N.C.
cherokeeeastern band of the cherokee
Catawbacatawba tribe
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 9: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Text
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 10: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
These ancient pieces are among the most important remaining artifacts of early civilization
Text
soapstone object with engraved
designs
ceremonial hand ax with
fossil
game stone
bowl fragment
ARROWHEADS(PROJECTILE
POINTS)
MORTAR & PESTLE
MORTAR & PESTLE
ARROWHEADS(PROJECTILE
POINTS)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 11: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 12: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 13: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 14: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 15: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 16: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 17: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 18: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
CherokeeFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 19: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
The Catawba, known as the river people, use a type of pit-firing and burnishing that makes their pots shine, and they also imprinted animal designs on their work.Catawba
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 20: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
The Catawba, known as the river people, use a type of pit-firing and burnishing that makes their pots shine, and they also imprinted animal designs on their work.Catawba
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 21: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
THE FIRST IMMIGRANT POTTERS TO N.C.
SMostly English, Germans and Moravian
Q Arrived in the latter half of the 18th century.
BMost from Pennsylvania and Virginia.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 22: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
old Salem (winston Salem)
North CarolinaPottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 23: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 24: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
DGOTTFRIED AUST
S Moravian settler.
O Brought pottery to the Winston-Salem region in the latter half of the 18th century.
L He was the first potter to arrive in Wachovia, a tract of land owned by the Moravians.
M He is responsible for one of the most vibrant pottery traditions in America.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 25: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
P Master of the first Moravian pottery in North CarolinA
U originally set up in Bethabara in 1755 and later moved to Salem in 1771.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 26: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 27: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Aust worked in a central and
eastern European tradition his
whole life. The highly stylized
flowers, foliage, and birds he
used as decorative motifs on
this slip-decorated dish are
evidence of his European
training.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 28: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
The early Moravians produced predominantly earthenware and later stoneware. They introduced stoneware to the Salem region in 1774. Rudolph Christ succeded Aust as master of Old Salem pottery and “the tradition continues today in what is now known as the City of Winston Salem”.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 29: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 30: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
living tradition or
disnification?
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 31: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 32: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 33: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 34: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 35: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 36: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 37: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Rudolph Christ
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 38: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 39: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 40: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
About 60 miles southeast of Old Salem is the town of Seagrove. Seagrove is also in a region that is rich in natural clay deposits.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 41: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 42: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 43: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
North CarolinaPottery
The Seagrove area is one of the largest communities of potters with the longest continual history of pottery making in the United States.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 44: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
SEAGROVERANDOLPH COUNTY
North CarolinaPottery
★
The Seagrove area is one of the largest communities of potters with the longest continual history of pottery making in the United States.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 45: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
30
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 46: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
Potters arriving in the Seagrove area in the 1700s were quick to realize the value of the local clay.
They first made redware, some plain and some decorated, using clay that fired to a reddish orange color.
30
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 47: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
The Earthenware was fired at a low temperature (1800 degrees F).
The ceramic wares could withstand major changes in temperature.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 48: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
By sometime in the first half of the 19th century, North Carolina potters had mostly switched to making their wares out of higher fired stoneware, which was also readily available.
Stoneware is fired at higher temperatures, causing the clay to become vitrified or waterproof.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 49: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
The Pots were used mainly in the kitchen for the preparation and storage of food and drink.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 50: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/50.jpg)
The Seagrove Potterss developed a local and regional market for everyday
functional wares.
Butter churns, pouring and serving dishes, storage jars, whiskey and wine jugs and containers used in clinics for medication.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 51: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
Ballarat
Butter Churn
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 52: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
The use of stoneware clay was possible because of the introduction of higher firing kilns, the most common type of kiln used by the early settlers is caled a groundhog kiln.
It's design comes from kilns in Germany and England. Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 53: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
A groundhog kiln is a primitive kiln made by burrowing into the side of a hill. A cave-like hole is lined with stone or brick. A chimney allows smoke to escape, wood
is used as fuel.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 54: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 55: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/55.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 56: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/56.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 57: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/57.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 58: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/58.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 59: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/59.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 60: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/60.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 61: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/61.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 62: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/62.jpg)
. In other parts of the state, an alkaline glaze was made from a combination of sand, crushed glass, and some clay and applied to the pottery before firing.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 63: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/63.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 64: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/64.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 65: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/65.jpg)
RPotters began shifting to stoneware productionIThe differences between British and German pottery became
more pronounced as did the regions they inhabited.
By 1850, Seagrove and Randolph County was the center of salt-glazed stoneware, and the Catawba Valley in Lincoln
County primarily sold alkaline-glazed stoneware.
TextText
distinct regional aesthetics emerge
1850‘scatawba VALEY
INFLUENCE: BRITISH
ALKALINE
1850‘sSeagrove INFLUENCE: GERMAN
Salt
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 66: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/66.jpg)
The Old Plank Road Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 67: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/67.jpg)
These pioneer farmer-potters forged new styles based on their skills and artistic visions, their surrounding natural resources, and the needs of their growing community.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 68: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/68.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 69: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/69.jpg)
The Industrial Reolution had made cheap glass, tin and factory made
pottery readily available and this was devastating to the potters across the country and especially so in Seagrove. Almost all the potteries closed their
doors forever.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 70: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/70.jpg)
http://books.google.com/books?id=Z95rwd1CwvsC&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&dq=treadle+wheel+in+seagrove&source=bl&ots=dRVaEqNYXf&sig=j1spGBu1cx-_W1ohfOc6dC3CFAM&hl=en#v=onepage&q=treadle%20wheel%20in%20seagrove&f=falsehttp://books.google.com/books?id=Z95rwd1CwvsC&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&dq=treadle+wheel+in+seagrove&source=bl&ots=dRVaEqNYXf&sig=j1spGBu1cx-_W1ohfOc6dC3CFAM&hl=en#v=onepage&q=treadle%20wheel%20in%20seagrove&f=false
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 71: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/71.jpg)
• S Because of their remote rural location and the local whisky distilling industry, some Seagrove potters were
able to survive a few decades longer
• K Eventuallythe effects of Prohibition were crippling. Driven by economic necessity, lack of other job
opportunities, family pride, and their own love of clay, many potters worked on against the odds.
http://books.google.com/books?id=Z95rwd1CwvsC&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&dq=treadle+wheel+in+seagrove&source=bl&ots=dRVaEqNYXf&sig=j1spGBu1cx-_W1ohfOc6dC3CFAM&hl=en#v=onepage&q=treadle%20wheel%20in%20seagrove&f=falsehttp://books.google.com/books?id=Z95rwd1CwvsC&pg=PA49&lpg=PA49&dq=treadle+wheel+in+seagrove&source=bl&ots=dRVaEqNYXf&sig=j1spGBu1cx-_W1ohfOc6dC3CFAM&hl=en#v=onepage&q=treadle%20wheel%20in%20seagrove&f=false
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 72: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/72.jpg)
The ones who persisted were joined in 1922 by an educated and worldly couple, Jacques and Juliana Busbee, who appreciated the local craftsmanship and used their marketing skills to
push the Seagrove area work more into the world’s view. The increase in travel by wealthier Americans, a growing awareness of world pottery history, and the new availability
of non-local ceramic materials all contributed to change in regional pottery styles.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 73: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/73.jpg)
They ordered pottery from local potters, shipped the wares to New York, and marketed the pottery at a tearoom in Greenwich Village operated by Juliana.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 74: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/74.jpg)
This period in the area’s history is marked by an explosion in variety of forms and colors.
Collectors embraced this work; their patronage and their view of pottery as more decorative
than functional pushed potters to utilize new materials and new firing methods to develop their
work further.
By the late 1920s, Seagrove area pottery was well known from the galleries of New York to the
garden shops of Florida.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 75: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/75.jpg)
L Jacques and Juliana Busbee started Jugtown Pottery.
J They hired and trained young potters to preserve the traditional shapes and glazes.
B Several Jugtown trainees later started their own potteries in the Jugtown community.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 76: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/76.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 77: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/77.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 78: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/78.jpg)
Jug Town is still a vary active pottery today .
Owner, Vernon Owens, recipient of the Folk Heritage Award and the NEA National Heritage Fellowship, wife Pam, and son Travis are
the main potters
Bobby Owens mixes clay and glazes the pieces. Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 79: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/79.jpg)
Jug Town is still a vary active pottery today .
Owner, Vernon Owens, recipient of the Folk Heritage Award and the NEA National Heritage Fellowship, wife Pam, and son Travis are
the main potters
Bobby Owens mixes clay and glazes the pieces.
authentic
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 80: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/80.jpg)
Vernon Owen, Pam Owen and Travis Owen
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 81: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/81.jpg)
Travis Owen
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 82: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/82.jpg)
Travis Owen
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 83: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/83.jpg)
Jugtown Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 84: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/84.jpg)
In order to survive, they had to adapt.
The immediate solution: high volume production of small pieces for the wholesale gift market. An individual potter might produce more than 500 pieces each day, all the same shape.
evolving public taste sending a generation of potters off to war
many of the materials for the new glazes became
unavailable
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 85: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/85.jpg)
Some of the oldest, historic pottery locations still in operation the "Original" Owens Pottery founded in 1895[5]
Jugtown Pottery founded in 1921[6]. Jugtown is on the National Registry of Historic Places.
A few Seagrove area potters continued making functional pottery during this time, including brothers James Owen and Rufus Owen, father of Ben Owen Sr.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 86: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/86.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 87: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/87.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 88: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/88.jpg)
The 1960s and 1970s were characterized by strong social changes across America. Both the “hippie” movement brought about renewed interest in handcrafts. Some of the old Seagrove area pottery families continued to train their own children or other interested apprentices, as they had for generations. Studio artists seeking a “back to the land” lifestyle, and academically trained potters began to
settle in the area, These new potters, like the first
English and German settlers, brought visible and constant
changes to the area throughout the entire remainder of the 20th
century.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 89: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/89.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 90: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/90.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 91: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/91.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 92: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/92.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 93: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/93.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 94: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/94.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 95: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/95.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 96: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/96.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 97: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/97.jpg)
ENOUGH!Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 98: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/98.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 99: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/99.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 100: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/100.jpg)
Some area potters continued the ideals and the traditions of the early Seagrove potters. Others embraced a wider perspective of what pottery could be, not as visibly influenced by the previous work done in the region.....
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 101: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/101.jpg)
• 1980’S until today have seen sometimes gradual ,sometimes explosive period of growth, creativity and influence in the area
• People from all over the world come to Seagrove for pottery and there has been an influx of academically trained potters in the area for possibly the first time in it’s history.
•
• Up until the most recent economic downturn, which has affected most potteries but closed the door of few, this time period has seen the appreciation of Seagrove take its rightful and significant place in the history of ceramics and it is known throughout the world as are the profiles of many of the artists who live there.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 102: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/102.jpg)
• Up to now, the apprenticeship system was the educational system and the work mostly stayed in the family. Seagrove potters have been resistant to, if not downright unaccepting of “outsiders” moving in -even from other parts of the state - until fairly recently when it became clear that the growing number of potters in the region was attracting far more business to the region than it was taking away from local potteries. Also, most of the younger generations such as Ben Owen 111 and Travis Owen have gone away to college before coming back to Seagrove, bringing back worldly knowledge and influence and a different perspective on their place in history.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 103: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/103.jpg)
• The decidedly non-academic leanings of the region have also been challenged by the establishment of a museum to preserve not only the history of Seagrove, but of the rich history in clay of the entire State of North Carolina. The North Carolina Pottery Center and Museum openend it’s doors to the public in the late 1990’s and features a wonderful collection of objects from across the state with rotating exhibitions to present a wide range of styles , from traditional pottery to conteemporary sculpture.
• The Center is widely supported by the entire community. and has been a labor of love for many who have seen the importance of preserving this history.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 104: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/104.jpg)
• Dwight Holland, A collector and historian and resident of the arta has been one of the driving forces behind the effort.
•Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 105: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/105.jpg)
• Just a few years after the center was finallly opened, it nearly had to close it’s doors when the state and federal support for the project nearly disappeared after the NC pottery Center was the focus of a conservative campaign during an election year. The center was portrayed as an example of wasteful government spending and ads were played ad nauseum depicting the project as being of little or no importance to the people of the state and ridiculing the whole notion that pottery should be serious enough to have a museum. “A pottery museum, really? “
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 106: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/106.jpg)
E The Cole, Auman, Owen, Teague, and Albright families are eighth- and ninth-generation potters in Seagrove who continue this tradition today.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 107: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/107.jpg)
search
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 108: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/108.jpg)
search
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 109: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/109.jpg)
The second story has to do with devil jugs, or scary faces jugs with devil horns. This story says that these devil jugs originated in slave communities When someone died, a devil jug was made and placed on the grave for one year. If the jug broke sometime during the year, it meant that the deceased was wrestling with the devil.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 110: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/110.jpg)
Some area potters continued the ideals and the traditions of the early Seagrove potters. Others embraced a wider perspective of what pottery could be, not as visibly influenced by the previous work done in the region.....
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 111: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/111.jpg)
An original potter at Jugtown.
Ben Owen Sr.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 112: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/112.jpg)
Ben Owen Sr.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 113: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/113.jpg)
Ben Owen Sr.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 114: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/114.jpg)
Ben Owen Sr.
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 115: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/115.jpg)
Ben Owen III
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 116: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/116.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 117: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/117.jpg)
chinese blue
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 118: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/118.jpg)
chinese red
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 119: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/119.jpg)
crystal matt yellow
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 120: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/120.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 121: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/121.jpg)
frogskin
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 122: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/122.jpg)
mirror black
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 123: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/123.jpg)
patina green
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 124: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/124.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 125: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/125.jpg)
teadust
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 126: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/126.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 127: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/127.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 128: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/128.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 129: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/129.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 130: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/130.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 131: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/131.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 132: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/132.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 133: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/133.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 134: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/134.jpg)
Mark HewittFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 135: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/135.jpg)
Dover PotteryFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 136: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/136.jpg)
Dover PotteryFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 137: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/137.jpg)
Dover PotteryFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 138: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/138.jpg)
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 139: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/139.jpg)
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 140: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/140.jpg)
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 141: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/141.jpg)
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 142: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/142.jpg)
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 143: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/143.jpg)
Fred Johnston
Carol Gentithis
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 144: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/144.jpg)
Fred Johnston
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 145: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/145.jpg)
Fred Johnston
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 146: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/146.jpg)
Fred JohnstonFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 147: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/147.jpg)
Fred Johnston
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 148: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/148.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 149: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/149.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 150: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/150.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 151: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/151.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 152: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/152.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 153: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/153.jpg)
Samantha Henneke
Bulldog Pottery Fine Arts
Bruce Gholson
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 154: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/154.jpg)
Bulldog Pottery Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 155: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/155.jpg)
Bulldog Pottery Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 156: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/156.jpg)
Bulldog Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 157: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/157.jpg)
Bulldog Pottery Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 158: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/158.jpg)
Jugtown Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 159: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/159.jpg)
Jugtown Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 160: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/160.jpg)
Jugtown Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 161: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/161.jpg)
Jugtown Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 162: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/162.jpg)
Westmore PotteryFriday, February 3, 12
![Page 163: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/163.jpg)
end.
Westmoore Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 164: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/164.jpg)
Westmoore Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 165: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/165.jpg)
Westmoore Pottery
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 166: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/166.jpg)
Friday, February 3, 12
![Page 167: 2. Southern Folk Pottery of North Carolina](https://reader038.vdocuments.us/reader038/viewer/2022110216/568c4d311a28ab4916a3021b/html5/thumbnails/167.jpg)
end.Friday, February 3, 12