1. Paul R. Mullins, “Negotiating Industrial Capitalism: Mechanisms of Change among Agrarian Potters,” in Historical Archaeology and the Study of American Culture, edited by Lu Ann De Cunzo and Bernard L. Herman (Winterthur, Del.: Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, 1996), p. 162.
2. Christopher T. Espenshade, Skelly and Loy, Inc., Monroeville, Pennsylvania, “Potters on the Holston: Historic Pottery Production in Washington County, Virginia,” report on file, Virginia Department of Historic Resources, Richmond (2002).
3. Excavations were conducted during May 2004 by The Ottery Group at the Mallicote-Decker Kiln Site (44wg556) on behalf of the Threatened Sites Program of the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Thomas Bodor, William Hoffman, Christopher Sperling, and Thomas Rutledge, The Ottery Group, Silver Spring, Maryland, “Archaeological Evaluation of the Mallicote-Decker Kiln Site (44wg556), Abingdon Vicinity, Washington County, Virginia,” report on file, Virginia Department of Historic Resources, Richmond (2004).
4. Barbara H. Magid, “An Archaeological Perspective on Alexandria’s Pottery Tradition,” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 21 (winter 1995–96): 73. |