1. Michael K. Brown, “Piecing Together the Past: Recent Research on the American China Factory, 1769–1772,” American Philosophical Society Proceedings 133, no. 4 (1989): 555–79.
2. Bradford L. Rauschenberg, “Andrew Duché: A Potter ‘a Little Too Much Addicted to Politicks,’” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 17, no. 1 (1991): 1–101.
3. W. Ross Ramsay, Judith A. Hansen, and E. Gael Ramsay, “An ‘A-Marked’ Porcelain Covered Bowl, Cherokee Clay, and Colonial America’s Contribution to the English Porcelain Industry,” Ceramics in America, edited by Robert Hunter (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England for the Chipstone Foundation, 2004), pp. 60–77.
4. Bradford L. Rauschenberg, “John Bartlam, Who Established ‘new Pottworks in South Carolina’ and Became the First Successful Creamware Potter in America,” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 17, no. 2 (1991): 1–66.
5. Stanley A. South, with Lisa Hudgins and Carl Steen, John Bartlam: Staffordshire in Carolina (Columbia: South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 2004).
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