Author name: Made from Clay .

La Crosse – Brower and Vail Pottery

Very little is known about this short-lived pottery. No pottery or sherds have been found. Alson Vail previously potted in Belin Wisconsin but we were unable to find much information about B. E. Brower. What we do know is the location of the pottery from a plat map of the city.

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Twin Grove Pottery

In about 1850 Isaac Sanborn started an earthenware pottery in Twin Grove, a small village in the Jefferson Township of Green County about ten miles southeast of the city of Monroe...

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Related article: Twin Grove Pottery Site Excavation A large number of sherds were recovered from the site. This article includes photos of them and findings and conclusions about the pottery produced there.

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Pierron Gurken crock

Milwaukee – Pierron Pottery Company

Louis M. Pierron was born in 1853, the son of Catherine(a) and Louis Pierron. Shortly after the death of the elder Louis, Catherine married Charles Hermann and Louis M. became Hermann’s stepson. Indications are that the German-born craftsman Charles Hermann...

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Two-Gallon Ovoid Hermann & Co. Jug

Milwaukee – Charles Hermann & Co. 1856 to 1882

Charles Hermann & Co. is the best known and most prolific stoneware manufacturer in Wisconsin in the 19th century. Spanning thirty years in Milwaukee, starting in 1856 and ending with the transfer of his business to his stepson in 1886, his products are still found all over Wisconsin and the upper Midwest. His factory employed a large staff of potters and decorators and served as a school for a number of these craftspeople to launch their own potteries. From the finest decorated jugs, pots and his churns of his pottery’s earliest years to the ubiquitous Albany slip, “beehive” jugs with the “C. HERMANN & CO. / MILWAUKEE” oval stamp, this entrepreneur made his mark. The authors provide new research that expands the knowledge of Hermann’s products and the people that made them.

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Charles Hermann & Co. Stoneware Examples

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Sheboygan – Henry W. Chamberlain

Chamberlain operated a store in Sheboygan in the late 1840’s and early 1850’s. Henry W. was a merchant conducting business similar to such Milwaukee notables as Leonard Farwell and J. N. Bonesteel (and perhaps L. Ransom) and had utilitarian stoneware made for himself to sell from his store.

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William Sanderson

William Sanderson founded the Milwaukee Stone Ware Factory and then promptly sold it. He was born in Ireland in 1820. From July 1839 until March of 1840 Sanderson partnered with Edward Selby and William Colson in a pottery Poughkeepsie, New York...

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Baraboo Pottery

A pottery was operated in Baraboo from 1851 to 1857 by Philip Pointon and his son. Two earthenware pieces that initiated our research, a molded tobacco jar and a wheel turned cream pot with strong attributions in the collection of the Sauk County Historical Society...

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British Hollow Pottery

Ethan Griffith made pottery between 1850 and some time after 1880 in a small town near Potosi Wisconsin.

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