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Coffee pot

Coffee pot
Maker:  William and John Turner
Stoneware
1790-1800
Coffee pot
Coffee pot
Maker:  William and John Turner
Stoneware
1790-1800
Coffee pot Maker: William and John Turner Stoneware 1790-1800
Status
Not on view
Label Text

In the late eighteenth century, black earthenware and stoneware made by English potters conjured up the art and culture of ancient Egypt, Greece, and Italy. This coffee pot may be similar to the blackwares owned by George and Martha Washington. The inventory taken after George Washington's death in 1799 records an "Egyptian china" teapot valued at fifty cents in the pantry overseen by Frank Lee, an enslaved butler at Mount Vernon.

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Date1790-1800
Maker (English, active 1787 - 1803)
Geography Made - England
Medium/TechniqueStoneware
DimensionsOverall (H x W x D): 8 1/4 in. x 9 1/4 in. x 5 7/8 in. (20.96 cm x 23.5 cm x 14.94 cm)
Credit LineGift of Walter Morris, 1904
Object numberW-503
DescriptionUnglazed, black-bodied, oviform stoneware coffee pot with incurved neck, reeded lower body, looped strap handle, and domed foot; a decorative band of diamond rouletting encircles the shoulder; strap handle with press-molded acanthus leaf decoration on its outer surface and at its lower terminal; spout molded with a band of acanthus leaves on a stippled background around its base; missing lid.


Published ReferencesSusan Gray Detweiler, George Washington's Chinaware (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1982), 159.

MarkingsStamped on the base of the pot: "TURNER".
Mount Vernon's object research is ongoing and information about this object is subject to change. For information on image use and reproductions, click here.
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