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  • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas (1932-1960)

  • Antiques

      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • STIPPLED UNGLAZED VASE PLANTER WITH PINK WASH
      • Texas Pottery / Stoneware. Hand thrown. chalice planter East Texas
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      • STIPPLED UNGLAZED VASE PLANTER WITH PINK WASH
      • Planter with pink colors6
      • Planter with pink colors1
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      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • 1-2 Gallon Tree Stump Planter (Stoneware / Pottery)
      • Hand Thrown Texas Pottery Stoneware East Texas
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      • 1-2 Gallon Tree Stump Planter (Stoneware / Pottery)
      • Planter4
      • Planter5
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      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • Pink Spittoon
      • 4.5 inches Tall
      • 8 inches across
      • Texas Pottery Stoneware
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      • Pink Spittoon
      • Pinkspitoon4
      • Spitoon2
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      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • White pitcher with stippled cobalt "X" decoration
      • Height 8"
      • Diameter 8"
      • Utilitarian Stoneware Texas Pottery Stoneware East Texas
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      • White pitcher with stippled cobalt "X" decoration
      • Cobaltxbyrdpitcher1
      • Cobaltxbyrdpitcher3
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      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • 1-2 Gallon Tree Stump Planter (Stoneware / Pottery)
      • Texas hand thrown Pottery / Stoneware East Texas
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      • Contact for Price & Info
      • 1-2 Gallon Tree Stump Planter (Stoneware / Pottery)
      • Brownbyrd3
      • Brownbyrd7
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      • Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas
      • (1932-1960)
      • Bud Vase rare signed piece.
      • 6 inches tall
      • Rare Signed Tyler (Byrd) Pottery from the collection of Lonnie Byrd.<br>Utilitarian East Texas
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      • Bud Vase rare signed piece.
      • Byrd vase2
      • Byrd vase3
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  • Biography

    Byrd Pottery Tyler Texas (1932-1960)

    Byrd Pottery was founded in 1932 by J.J Byrd in Tyler, Texas. The son of A.S. Byrd, J.J. had previously co-owned Rhonsboro Pottery with his father. Byrd Pottery produced both utilitarian and decorated pieces. Byrd Pottery closed down around 1960. J.J.s wife, Maude "Mama" Byrd designed planters and vases for tourists, as well as a particularly collectible decorated line. It seems most (but not all) pieces of Byrd Pottery are unmarked, and you have to recognize it by the shape, clay and glaze.

    Collectible Byrd Teawares and Pottery

    Article from APRIL 11, 2011 
    Tea lovers can go a bit gaga over collectible tea wares. Sometimes they even go trolling the antique stores, garage sales, and flea markets, hoping to find that special something such as a Wedgwood cup and saucer. Not that I’ve ever done that, nope, not me, uh-uh, well maybe once … or twice … or every Saturday afternoon I could manage. Actually, I had to go only as far as my TV remote for a particular find: Byrd Pottery. The stoneware (also called “crockery”) pieces are true collectibles, according to Bob Phillips on Texas Country Reporter. The company started in 1932 in Tyler, Texas, when growing roses was a major business in the area and around the time that the East Texas oilfield was discovered. Tyler was even known as the rose capital of the world. Byrd Pottery bloomed with those roses and the town, as the population grew to over 28,000, and they were in business until around 1960, a relatively short time that makes their pieces somewhat rare. The founder was J.J. Byrd, who moved to Tyler with his family from Rhonesboro, Texas, where he had co-owned Rhonesboro Pottery with A.S. Byrd, his father. J.J.’s wife, Maude “Mama” Byrd, was one of the designers and focused on planters and vases for tourists to buy. However, there are also pitchers, creamers, covered sugar bowls, mugs in various styles, lidded storage jars, and other pieces for your teatime delight. This company and the fairly limited number of pieces created there that still exist has been a secret among collectors of stoneware for many years. A guidebook was privately published in 1991 by Robert Fleet to help identify the pieces, but it’s now out of print and considered something of a collectible in its own right. You can find a copy here or there for sale, mainly online. His son, Gary Fleet, is an avid collector and a High School sports coach in Tyler. Byrd Pottery pieces have been found in locations across the U.S., mostly in their most famous design, called “Blue Bonnet” or alternately “Blue Peak,” depending on which seller you go by. It’s a rather crude and simple design in creamy white with cobalt blue “bonnets” or “peaks” applied with a sponge. Other designs are solid creamy white, solid brown, and solid cobalt blue, as well as stippled. Some of their pieces are as small as 3¼” high by 4” wide while others are as large as an unglazed jug that is 13½” tall and 9” in diameter or a 3-gallon wall crock with cobalt markings saying “FROM TYLER POTTERY 3 TYLER TEX.” One of the rarest items is a batter bowl with a pour spout and big handle — perfect for whipping up some scone batter for your next

    Credit Online Stores, Inc., and The English Tea Store Blog with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.



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