Back in 1980 there were only a handful of articles, one exhibition catalog and no books devoted to the subject of southern stoneware or pottery. |
Southern Stoneware Resources Brothers In Clay, John Burrison
Great and Noble Jar, Cinda Baldwin Turners and Burners, Charles (Terry) Zug American Stonewares, Georgeanna Greer The Pottery and Porcelain of the United States, Barber Made of Alabama Clay, Bonnie Gums The Folk Pottery of Cheever, Arie, and Lanier Meaders, by Michael Crocker and Newton Crouch Index of Southern Potters, Howard Smith The Melmar Pottery, Leon Danielson The Craven Family of Southern Folk Potters, Quincy Scarborough The Folk Pottery Traditions of Buncombe County, NC, Western Carolina University The Traditional Pottery of Alabama, The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts Pottery from the Mountains of Alabama, Bessemer Hall of History Potters of the Catawba Valley, Daisy Wade Bridges Just Mud, Arthur McLaurin and Harvey Teal I Made this Jar, Jill Koverman The Traditional Potters of Seagrove, Robert Lock North Carolina Art Pottery, Everette James Crossroads in Clay, Catherine Horne Five North Carolina Folk Artists, Charles Zug England's Quick Reference to North Carolina Makers, Christopher England Catawba Clay, Pottery from the Catawba Nation, North Carolina Pottery Center The Rye Pottery, Marion County Alabama, James Cormany The Potters of Randolph County Alabama, James Cormany Traditional Pottery in North Carolina, Bob Conway The Potter's Eye, Mark Hewitt and Nancy Sweezy Folk Pottery of the Shenandoah Valley, William Wiltshire The Art of the Potter, Diana and Gary Stradling North Carolina and Southern Folk Pottery, Bill Ivey The Wilson Potters, Michael Brown The Pottery of Stockton, James Cormany Two Centuries of Potters, A Catawba Valley Tradition, Lincoln County Museum of History J.B. Coleís Pottery, Steeds N.C., Catalogue Making Faces, Jill Koverman The Afro-American Tradition in Decorative Arts, John Michael Vlach Jugtown Pottery, Jean Crawford An Archaeological Survey of Pottery Production Sites in the Old Edgefield District of South Carolina, Carl Steen Chicken Waterers, Churns and Cemetery Urns: the Tyger River Stoneware Tradition, Cinda Baldwin Archaeological Survey of Alkaline-Glazed Pottery Kiln Sites in Old Edgefield District South Carolina, McKissick Museum Archeological Investigations at the Trapp and Chandler Pottery, Kirksey, South Carolina, Gerald Landreth Early Georgia, Vol.30, Number 2 October 2002, The Society for Georgia Archaeology Innovations in Clay: Catawba Valley Pottery, Hickory Museum of Art Catawba Clay: Contemporary Southern Face Jugs Makers, Barry Huffman The Meaders Family, Ralph Rinzler and Robert Sayers Early Decorative Stoneware of the Edgefield District of South Carolina, Greenville County Museum of Art Georgia Clay, The Museum of Arts and Sciences, Macon, Georgia Collecting South Carolina Folk Art: A Guide, Gary Stanton Seagrove Pottery, The Walter and Dorothy Auman Legacy, Quincy Scarborough and Robert Armfield Alabama Folk Pottery, Joey Brackner Carolina Folk, McKissick Museum South Carolina Antiquities, Volume 18, Nos. 1 & 2, and Volume 21, Nos. 1 & 2, Archeological Society of South Carolina Ramey and Hughes Ledger, January 1st 1839 - April 7th 1840, Pottersville South Carolina The South Carolina Dispensary & Embossed S.C. Whiskey Bottles and Jugs 1865-1915, Harvey Teal and Rita Foster Wallace Ceramics in America, 2006, Robert Hunter |
Today, the list is mind boggling! <Here is what I have in my library. |