1. Josiah Wedgwood, An Address to the Workmen in the Pottery, on the Subject of Entering into the Service of Foreign Manufacturers By Josiah Wedgwood, F.R.S., Potter to Her Majesty, Newcastle, Staffordshire (1783), reprinted in Bradford L. Rauschenberg, “Andrew Duché: A Potter ‘a Little Too Much Addicted to Politicks,’” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 17, no. 1 (May 1991): 1–101.
2. Graham Hood, “The Career of Andrew Duché,” Art Quarterly 31 (1968): 168–84. Rauschenberg, “Andrew Duché.”
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,” in Ceramics in America, edited by Robert Hunter (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England for the Chipstone Foundation, 2004), pp. 60–77.
4. Stanley South, John Bartlam: Staffordshire in Carolina, South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology Research Manuscript Series 231 (Columbia: University of South Carolina, 2004); 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 South, The Search for John Bartlam at Cain Hoy: American’s First Creamware Potter, South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology Research Manuscript Series 219 (Columbia: University of South Carolina, 1993).
6. South, John Bartlam, pp. 27–30.
7. Ibid., p. 157.
8. Alfred Coxe Prime, comp., The Arts and Crafts in Philadelphia, Maryland and South Carolina, 1721–1785: Gleanings from Newspapers ([Topsfield, Mass.]: Walpole Society, 1929), p. 116.
9. Philip M. Hamer, ed., The Papers of Henry Laurens, 16 vols. (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press for the South Carolina Historical Society, 1968–2003), vol. 8, Oct. 10, 1771–April 19, 1773 (1980), p. 55.
10. Prime, Arts and Crafts, p. 120. |