Teapot
Dateca. 1700
Attributed to
John Dwight
(1633-1703)
Attributed to
John Dwight's Fulham Pottery
(1668-?)
OriginEngland, London, Fulham
MediumStoneware, salt-glazed, white
Credit LineArchaeological Collection, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Object numberT067-2013,17
DescriptionTeapot excavated at the James Geddy House Site, Williamsburg, Virginia(01204-19BB).Label TextSalt-glazed stoneware was first produced in what is now Germany. Large amounts of this durable product were shipped all over the globe, partly because it was well suited for the safe storage of food. British potters worked to copy German stoneware and developed a unique product known as white salt-glazed stoneware. The refined clay used in British wares offered all the qualities of more utilitarian stoneware, but could also be made into refined tableware. Colonists in the Chesapeake used large quantities of German and British stoneware, both in the kitchen and on the table.
This teapot is the earliest known example of a white stoneware teapot excavated from an American site.
ca. 1760
1750-1780
ca. 1735
1600-1620
ca. 1740
ca. 1750
1730-1760
1620-1640
ca. 1760
ca. 1765
1700-1720