Guadalupe Pottery Company
Jar

CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Jar
Datec. 1857–1869
Made inSeguin, Texas, United States
MediumAlkaline-glazed stoneware
Dimensions10 1/4 × 9 5/8 in. diameter (26.0 × 24.4 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, museum purchase funded by The Brown Foundation, Inc.
Object numberB.2001.8
Current Location
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
Texas Alcove And Hall
Exposé

Explore Further

Department
Bayou Bend
Object Type
Description

North Carolina native John M. Wilson trained to be a lawyer and later became a Presbyterian minister and entrepreneur. In 1850 he moved his family and those whom he enslaved to Missouri. In the wake of the violence that arose in the region in the dispute over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a free state or a slave state, Wilson moved in 1856 and settled in Seguin, Texas. By 1857, he established the Guadalupe Pottery, which was active until 1869. Most of the work was carried out by enslaved workers, some of whom later established the firm of H. Wilson and Company. They may have learned the trade while in North Carolina or from others trained in southern pottery traditions associated with the Edgefield District of South Carolina, which included the use of a partially subterranean groundhog kiln and alkaline or ash glazes.

This straight-sided jar is among the simplest stoneware pottery forms, which would have been used for storing and preserving foods before refrigeration was available.


Provenance[Russell Barnes, Austin]; purchased by MFAH, 2001.
Exhibition History"Exhibited As We Are”: Fighting Racism with Art in the Age of Slavery,” The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Bayou Bend, April 29–August 16, 2015.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
[no inscriptions]
[no marks]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

If you have questions about this work of art or the MFAH Online Collection please contact us.

Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.143
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.139
Four-Gallon Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2001.9
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.132
Five-Gallon Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.55
Jar with Lid
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware with salt drips
B.2012.58.A,.B
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.129
Two-Gallon Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.124
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.125
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.126
Five-Gallon Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Alkaline-glazed stoneware with kiln drops
B.2012.53
Jar
Guadalupe Pottery Company
c. 1857–1869
Titamium-oxide and alkaline-glazed stoneware
B.2012.54