Bird bottle
Dateca. 1735
Maker
William Rogers
MediumEarthenware, lead-glazed
DimensionsHeight: 8 12/16”
Diameter of base: 3 13/16”
Diameter of mouth: 3 3/16”
Diameter at belly: 4”
Perch length: 1 ¼”
Perch width: 1 3/16”
Credit LineArchaeological Collection, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Object numberT067-2013,9
DescriptionBird bottle excavated at the James Geddy House site, Williamsburg, Virginia, 3539.E.R.987D, 1329-A–19.BLabel Text“Martin-pots” were mounted on buildings to encourage nesting by purple martins, valued for their voracious consumption of mosquitos. This example was made at the William Rogers Pottery, established in Yorktown, Virginia, about 1720. At Rogers’s death in 1739 a list of his wares included “4 doz bird bottles.”
The entrepreneurial Rogers was a brewer by trade. He owned the Rogers Pottery, but employed others to make its earthenware and stoneware vessels. The business was unusually large for its time and place, and records suggest that it exported wares to other colonies and perhaps even the West Indies. Contemporary British law discouraged large scale colonial manufacturing, but Virginia officials downplayed the size of Rogers’s operation in official reports.
Exhibition(s)
1750-1780
ca. 1760
ca. 1700
1620-1640
ca. 1760
ca. 1765
1600-1620
ca. 1760
1770
ca. 1730
ca. 1730
1700-1720