![]() ![]() 2017)Įditor’s Introduction, by Christopher C. Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage, Vol. "The Stoneware Pottery Communities and Heritage of Edgefield, South Carolina" (Part 2) of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 6(2): 155–169 (2017) ( link). Manufacturing Social Class: Entrepreneurs and Industrial Slavery in the Rural Antebellum South, by Brooke Kenline-Nyman. of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 6(2): 133–154 (2017) ( link). of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 6(2): 110–132 (2017) ( link).Ī Dragon Kiln in the Americas: European-American Innovation and African-American Industry, by George W. ![]() of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 6(2): 78–109 (2017) ( link).Ĭrosses, Crescents, Slashes, Stars: African American Potters and Edgefield District Pottery Marks, by J. Who Were the Potters in the Old Edgefield District? by Carl Steen and Corbett Toussaint. of African Diaspora Archaeology & Heritage 6(2): 55–77 (2017) ( link). Innovation, Industry, and African-American Heritage in Edgefield, South Carolina, by Christopher C. 6, Issue 2 (July 2017), special collection, edited by Christopher C. "The Stoneware Pottery Communities and Heritage of Edgefield, South Carolina" (Part 1), Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage, Vol. Our project collaborators published a series of peer-reviewed articles on a variety of studies, findings, and new questions concerning the pottery communities of Edgefield in 2017. Reports of Project Results and New Questions, 2017 Through studies of craft enterprise and the industrial revolution, this book uncovers key insights into American history from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. This expansive yet concise survey discusses archaeological research from sites across the United States that once manufactured, harvested, or processed commodities. The Edgefield stoneware potteries are featured in a new book on The Archaeology of Craft and Industry, by Chris Fennell, in the “American Experience in Archaeological Perspective” book series, U. You can learn more in an article with more of his renderings of the Pottersville kiln and support buildings: “Visualizing the Stoneware Potteries of William Rogers of Yorktown and Abner Landrum of Pottersville,” by Robert Hunter and Oliver Mueller-Heubach, in Ceramics in America ( 2019). ![]() Based on this detailed body of data, he produced a reconstruction rendering of the kiln. Mueller-Heubach examined our excavation findings, reports, and publications. Oliver is an archaeologist with expertise in investigating stoneware kilns. Drawing by Oliver Mueller-Heubach, courtesy of Robert Hunter and Oliver Mueller-Heubach. This is a conjectural reconstruction drawing of the Pottersville, SC kiln for producing stoneware, circa 1817. Archaeology of Edgefield, South Carolina Pottery Communities ![]()
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