Martha's Flowers pitcher |
Often the potter's husband, Joe Lamb, would seek out the potential customers and ask if they needed help. You could hear the others, usually women as I recall, hidden away, back in the factory portion of the building chatting and laughing as they worked over the clay and the glazes. But, being a liberal arts college student with few means, I left, each time wishing I could purchase something and realizing I didn't have the available funds to actually own any of the pieces I'd see there. It is surprising to me that this many years later I finally have some pieces. In fact, for many years, I couldn't decide which pattern or glazes were my favorites, but finally settled on Blue Ridge to collect. Some of my first pieces of the stoneware were given to me by a fellow teacher and friend, Mona Helbert, who has now passed. I wish she could see how her gift has influenced me so many years later. I used those pieces of Blue Ridge for many years during the 1980s and 1990s--still have most of them even today. The stoneware is truly an enduring example of how people in the hills of Tennessee used local materials and local labor to create a treasure worth owning and enjoying for many, many years.
thank you Michelle for sharing your knowledge with me...What a beautiful story...I will be back to visit again....until then....Lana from China Galore.
ReplyDeleteFound the blog - very interesting. Thanks for letting me know about this and good luck with your writings and efforts to document Iron Mountain Pottery's history. Mary - we met today.
ReplyDelete