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In the last part of this two-part episode, Stuart Marshall continues his discussion on the importance of Moravian pottery as well as providing information on the materials used to make the pottery, the difference in pottery techniques used today compared to 18th and 19th century, and his experience trying to retrace the steps of these Moravian potters.
Bibliography & Further Reading:
Chipstone---Ceramics in America:
Luke Beckerdite and Johanna Brown: Eighteenth-Century Earthenware from North Carolina: The Moravian Tradition Reconsidered
Mary Farrell: Making North Carolina Earthenware
Alain C. Outlaw: The Mount Shepherd Pottery Site, Randolph County, North Carolina
Stephen C. Compton, “Research Note: The Eighteenth-Century Potters of Salisburyand Rowan County, North Carolina,” MESDA Journal Vol 39 (2018)
Stephen C. Compton, North Carolina's Moravian Potters: The Art and Mystery of Pottery-Making in Wachovia (Fonthill Media LLC: America Through Time, 2019)
John Bivins, The Moravian Potters in North Carolina (Chapel Hill: UNC Press for Old Salem, Inc., 1972)
Adelaide Fries, ed.,: Records of the Moravians in North Carolina Vol. 1
Adelaide Fries, ed.,: Records of the Moravians in NC, Vol. 3, p. 1231
Daniel B. Thorpe, The Moravian Community in Colonial North Carolina: Pluralism on the Southern Frontier (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1989)
Charles G. Zug III, Turners and Burners: The Folk Potters of North Carolina (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1986).
Other links:
David Drake
MESDA piece: https://mesda.org/exhibit/storage-jar/
Music (Freemusicarchive.org):
On my Way to Work by Lobo Loco (Attribution-NonCommericial-NoDerivatives: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
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In the last part of this two-part episode, Stuart Marshall continues his discussion on the importance of Moravian pottery as well as providing information on the materials used to make the pottery, the difference in pottery techniques used today compared to 18th and 19th century, and his experience trying to retrace the steps of these Moravian potters.
Bibliography & Further Reading:
Chipstone---Ceramics in America:
Luke Beckerdite and Johanna Brown: Eighteenth-Century Earthenware from North Carolina: The Moravian Tradition Reconsidered
Mary Farrell: Making North Carolina Earthenware
Alain C. Outlaw: The Mount Shepherd Pottery Site, Randolph County, North Carolina
Stephen C. Compton, “Research Note: The Eighteenth-Century Potters of Salisburyand Rowan County, North Carolina,” MESDA Journal Vol 39 (2018)
Stephen C. Compton, North Carolina's Moravian Potters: The Art and Mystery of Pottery-Making in Wachovia (Fonthill Media LLC: America Through Time, 2019)
John Bivins, The Moravian Potters in North Carolina (Chapel Hill: UNC Press for Old Salem, Inc., 1972)
Adelaide Fries, ed.,: Records of the Moravians in North Carolina Vol. 1
Adelaide Fries, ed.,: Records of the Moravians in NC, Vol. 3, p. 1231
Daniel B. Thorpe, The Moravian Community in Colonial North Carolina: Pluralism on the Southern Frontier (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1989)
Charles G. Zug III, Turners and Burners: The Folk Potters of North Carolina (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1986).
Other links:
David Drake
MESDA piece: https://mesda.org/exhibit/storage-jar/
Music (Freemusicarchive.org):
On my Way to Work by Lobo Loco (Attribution-NonCommericial-NoDerivatives: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)