SOLD! for $1,920.00.
(Note: Prices realized include a buyer's premium.)
If you have items like this you wish to consign, click here for more information:
Selling with Case- Low Estimate: $400.00
- High Estimate: $600.00
- Realized: $1,920.00
- Share this:
Early Washington County, Virginia stoneware preserving jar signed and dated in script, Jesse Vestal 1879. 7 7/8" H. Note: Jesse/Jessee Vestal (born 1828 North Carolina-died 1904 Virginia) is known for his beautifully incised script on pottery. His family appears to have been in Washington Co. VA by 1833. In the 1850 census he is listed as still living with his parents. Both Jesse and his father are recorded as farmers. However, his most famous piece of pottery, a jug with a poem on it, is dated 1849. This jug is owned by the William King Regional Arts Center in Abingdon, refer to LEGACY IN CLAY: POTTERY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA, William King Regional Arts Center, Abingdon, VA and GREAT ROAD STYLE: THE DECORATIVE ARTS LEGACY OF SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA AND EAST TENNESSEE, Betsy K. White. While Jesseís father is listed as a farmer in the 1850 Population Census, he appears as the only potter in the 1850 Schedule of Manufactures for Washington Co. (Source: Potters on the Holston prepared by C. Espenshade). Jesse married into the Miller family of potters. At least one of his sons became a potter. Research courtesy of Carole Wahler. Provenance: Property of a private Virginia collection. CONDITION: Chips to rim, later applied gold paint.