Contents
Ceramics in America 2025

Introduction
Ronald W. Fuchs II

Colonowares of the Gulf South
Gregory A. Waselkov

’Very Courteously Entertained’: Ceramic Tea Wares at James Logan’s Stenton
Dennis Pickeral

The Potter Hath Power Over His Clay: The Earthenware Industry of 18th Century Philadelphia
Deborah Miller

The Earliest Known Piece of Thuringian Porcelain in North America
Deborah Miller and Ronald W. Fuchs II

“Strange And Beautiful Birds in Pennsylvania”: A  1754 Philadelphia Slipware Dish
Robert Hunter

Connecticut Clobbered: An Amsterdams Bont Punch Bowl from Hartford County
Philippe Halbert

From Jiangnan to Staffordshire: Chinese Landscapes on English Ceramics
Ronald W. Fuchs II

Roll of the Dice: Evidence for the Production of True Porcelain in South Carolina in the Late 1760s–Early 1770s
J. Victor Owen, Brandon Boucher, and John D. Greenough

The Battle of North Point Baltimore Stoneware Pitcher
Robert Hunter

The “Lies” of Truthful James: Racial Politics in Ceramics
Abi Lua

“The Sign of What We Are”: Gustav Stickley’s Ceramics as Markers of Taste and Character
Jonathan Clancy

History in Blue and White: The Patriotic Wares of Charles Volkmar and Kate T. Cory
Margi Hofer

Peter Voulkos’s Unruly Demo: The Two-Minute Teapot as a Cultural Calisthenic
Ezra Shales