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  • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton Henderson Texas (1841-1909)

  • Antiques

      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • 5 Gallon Churn
      • 16" Tall
      • 11" Wide
      • East Texas Pottery / Stoneware, Rusk County, Henderson, TX
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      • 5 Gallon Churn
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      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • Pitcher Signed JR where handle attaches at top.
      • 11" Tall
      • 7" Across at widest point
      • Texas Handmade utilitarian pottery
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      • Pitcher  Signed JR where handle attaches at top.
      • Jr pitcher signed2
      • Jr pitcher signed5
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      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • 4 Gallon Churn
      • 16 inches tall
      • 10.5 inches across
      • Circa 1870s Texas Stoneware Pottery Alkaline Glaze.  Probably the most beautiful JR I have owned or seen.
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      • 4 Gallon Churn
      • 4gallon13
      • 4gallon7
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      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • 5 Gallon Churn
      • Texas Pottery Stoneware.  East Texas
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      • 5 Gallon Churn
      • 5gallon5
      • 5gallon3
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      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • Signed 1/2 Gallon Jug East Texas
      • Height 8"
      • Diameter 5"
      • Rare and Outstanding One/Half-Gallon Alkaline-Glazed Stoneware Jug, Stamped “J.R,” Joseph Clifford Demerval "Cliff" Rushton, Rusk County, TX, circa 1873-1900, . Impressed “J.R,” for potter, Joseph C.D. Rushton (1841-1909).&nbsp;&nbsp;This jug displays one of the finest alkaline glazes that we have seen on an example of Southern stoneware.&nbsp;Awareness of Texas’s rich potting history has increased in recent years, in part due to the 2015 Museum of Fine Arts, Houston exhibit and corresponding publication, “Texas Clay: 19th-Century Pottery from the Bayou Bend Collection.” When put into proper context, many of Texas’s stoneware potteries can be viewed as an extension of the Edgefield, SC tradition as several of its major potting families began their careers in Edgefield, eventually traveling westward to Alabama and ultimately establishing shops in Texas. These included the Cogburns, the Prothros, the Duncans, the Leopards, and the Rushtons.. According to Southern ceramics scholar, Joey Brackner, Rushton's father, Joseph Clifford Rushton (1810-1868), learned the potter's trade in Edgefield, SC, before establishing a pottery circa 1834 in the community of Cedric, located on the border of Chambers and Randolph counties, Alabama. He potted there with his son, Clifford, the jug's maker, until his death in 1868. Clifford Rushton moved to Texas due to his father's death and the arrival of Reconstruction, potting in Rusk County until his death in 1909. For more information on the Rushton family of potters, see Brackner, "The Shaping of Texas Pottery. . ." in Texas Clay. Combining a beautiful glaze, desirable form, and rare maker's mark, this object is among the finest examples of Texas stoneware to come to market in many&nbsp;years. <br>Seargent<br>Utilitarian Stoneware<br>
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      • Signed 1/2 Gallon Jug East Texas
      • Jrjughalfgallon3
      • Jrjughalfgallon5
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      • JR Pottery Joseph Rushton
      • Henderson Texas (1841-1909)
      • Double Signed Pitcher East Texas
      • Hieght 10.75"
      • Diameter 6.75"
      • Seargent&nbsp;<br>Utilitarian Stoneware<br><br>
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      • Double Signed Pitcher  East Texas
      • Jrpitcher1
      • Jrpitcher7
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  • Biography

    JR Pottery Joseph Rushton Henderson Texas (1841-1909)

    Joseph Clifford Demerval "Cliff" Rushton, Rusk County, TX, circa 1873-1900, Impressed “J.R,” for potter, Joseph C.D. Rushton (1841-1909). This churn displays one of the finest alkaline glazes that we have seen on an example of Texas stoneware. Awareness of Texas’s rich potting history has increased in recent years, in part due to the 2015 Museum of Fine Arts, Houston exhibit and corresponding publication, “Texas Clay: 19th-Century Pottery from the Bayou Bend Collection.” When put into proper context, many of Texas’s stoneware potteries can be viewed as an extension of the Edgefield, SC tradition as several of its major potting families began their careers in Edgefield, eventually traveling westward to Alabama and ultimately establishing shops in Texas. These included the Cogburns, the Prothros, the Duncans, the Leopards, and the Rushtons.. According to Southern ceramics scholar, Joey Brackner, Rushton's father, Joseph Clifford Rushton (1810-1868), learned the potter's trade in Edgefield, SC, before establishing a pottery circa 1834 in the community of Cedric, located on the border of Chambers and Randolph counties, Alabama. He potted there with his son, Clifford, the jug's maker, until his death in 1868. Clifford Rushton moved to Texas due to his father's death and the arrival of Reconstruction, potting in Rusk County until his death in 1909. For more information on the Rushton family of potters, see Brackner, "The Shaping of Texas Pottery. . ." in Texas Clay. Combining a beautiful glaze, desirable form, and rare maker's mark, this object is among the finest examples of Texas stoneware to come to market in many years.

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