Figure 1 Oblique view of the Lewis kiln, Buckley, showing walk-in
entrance, fireboxes, alternating brick flooring, and
surrounding hovel wall base. Scale bars each measure 2m (approximately 6.5').
(All photos, courtesy Earthworks Archaeological Services.) Figure 2 The potters cottage and workshop, comprising five individual rooms. The possible drying floor lies at the bottom left of this photograph. Scale bar measures 2m. Figure 3 The remains of the second kiln uncovered during the excavations. Scale bars measure 1m (approximately 3.3') and 2m. Figure 4 Face fragment, Lewis Pottery Complex, Buckley, North Wales, mid-eighteenth to nineteenth century. Biscuit-fired earthenware. One of the most unusual sherds recovered during the excavations, it bears an applied molded bearded face and is coated with white clay |