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  2. McDade Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDade_Pottery

    McDade Pottery was the largest, longest-lived and most prolific of a series of potteries that manufactured utilitarian stoneware in Bastrop County, Texas, beginning in the 19th century. The pottery is the most successful business ever to exist in the town of McDade.

  3. Marshall Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Pottery

    Marshall Pottery Inc. is the largest manufacturer of red clay pots in the United States. From 1974 [1] to 2015, Marshall Pottery operated a 100,000 ft 2 (9,000 m 2) retail store adjacent to its headquarters in Marshall, Texas, which at one time attracted over 500,000 tourists each year. Marshall Pottery was founded by W. F. Rocker in Marshall ...

  4. Transfer printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_printing

    Pottery decorated using this technique is known as transferware or transfer ware. It was developed in England from the 1750s on, and in the 19th century became enormously popular in England, though relatively little used in other major pottery-producing countries. The bulk of production was from the dominant Staffordshire pottery industry ...

  5. At Home (store) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At_Home_(store)

    At Home was founded in 1979 in Schertz, Texas, as Garden Ridge Pottery and was later renamed to Garden Ridge. Investment firm Three Cities Research became the largest shareholder of Garden Ridge in 1999. Garden Ridge filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2004. After the reorganization, the corporation emerged from Chapter 11 in 2005.

  6. The Wilson Potteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wilson_Potteries

    The Wilson Antique Pottery Collectors Show, previously called the Texas Collector's Pottery Show, has been held annually in October since 2003. Sponsored by the Wilson Pottery Foundation, the show brings together antiques collectors to exchange pottery and information on antique pottery, and helps the foundation seek additional Wilson pieces.

  7. Chintzware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chintzware

    Chintzware, or chintz pottery, describes chinaware and pottery covered with a dense, all-over pattern of flowers (similar to chintz textile patterns) or, less often, other objects. It is a form of transferware where the pattern is applied by transfer printing as opposed to the more traditional method of painting by hand.

  8. W. S. George Pottery Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._S._George_Pottery_Company

    William Shaw George purchased the controlling interest in the East Palestine Pottery Company from the Sebring brothers in 1904, renaming the company The W. S. George Pottery Company. In 1910 the company opened a manufacturing facility in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania ("Plant #2"), and in 1914 another facility was opened in Kittanning, Pennsylvania ...

  9. Johnson Brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnson_Brothers

    The four original "Johnson Brothers" were Alfred, Frederick, Henry and Robert. Their father married the daughter of a master potter, James Meakin. In 1883, Alfred and Frederick Johnson began production at a defunct pottery, known as the Charles Street Works, that they had purchased at a bankruptcy sale in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent.

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