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Face Vessel

American History Museum

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International media Interoperability Framework
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    Object Details

    maker

    unknown

    Description

    Between the late 1600s and the Civil War, the rapid growth of the southern plantation economy and a sparse white population led to increasing reliance on the labor of enslaved blacks. Most were agricultural laborers, but a significant number were craftspeople. Among these skilled slaves were a small number of potters working in the Edgefield District of South Carolina. Anecdotal and archeological evidence has been used to establish that enslaved potters were making face vessels in the Edgefield area before the Civil War.
    The origins of the southern face vessel tradition are largely un-documented. Some enslaved black potters in South Carolina certainly began making face vessels in the mid 1800s, possibly inspired by African burial rituals or as charms used in religious ceremonies. The contrasting eyes and teeth on most of the slave-made face vessels are kaolin clay, a key ingredient in the manufacture of porcelain. The Edgefield area of South Carolina was known in the 1700s and 1800s for its rich supply of kaolin.
    A number of face vessels have been linked stylistically to enslaved potters at Thomas Davies’ Palmetto Firebrick Works, which operated in the mid-1860s, and Lewis Miles’s Stoney Bluff and Miles Mill potteries operating from about 1837-1894. As late as 1900, ceramics historian Edwin A. Barber felt it was necessary to state that face vessels similar to these were not made in Africa, as was supposed by some collectors, but by African American potters who were enslaved at Edgefield potteries.
    This piece, on the left, may have been at Lewis Miles’s pottery and came to the museum in the 1920s after the death of Mary Elizabeth Sinnott, a Washington, DC collector.

    Credit Line

    The Estate of Mary Elizabeth Sinnott

    date made

    mid 1800s

    ID Number

    CE.324314

    catalog number

    324314

    accession number

    68233

    Object Name

    face vessel
    face jug

    Physical Description

    ceramic, stoneware, coarse (overall material)

    Measurements

    overall: 5 in x 3 in; 12.7 cm x 7.62 cm

    place made

    United States: South Carolina, Edgefield

    Associated Place

    United States: South Carolina, Edgefield

    See more items in

    Home and Community Life: Ceramics and Glass
    Face Vessels
    Cultures & Communities
    Domestic Furnishings
    Many Voices, One Nation

    Exhibition

    Many Voices, One Nation

    Exhibition Location

    National Museum of American History

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-2c34-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_573760

    Discover More

    face vessel

    American Face Vessels

    face vessel

    Selected Bibliography

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