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Staffordshire slipware trailed and dotted drinking pot.

Notes

Drinking pot with dots below rim and trailing across body. Everted rim. 1 rim sherd on display at International Slavery Museum, Liverpool. Measurements taken from largest mended portion.


Object Type


Has it Been Conserved?

No


Where Was It Found?

Project Site: House for Families [more details]


Material

Coarse Earthenware


Vessel

Hollow


Manufacturing Technology

Wheel Thrown


Form

Drinking Pot


Completeness

Body, Rim


Decorative Technology

Slip


Decorative Patern


Date

1700-1770


Country of Origin

England


Illustration shows object in comparison to the size of a quarter


Object Number

1722439. SS V.13

DAACS Number

1722439


Project: House for Families

The structure identified as the “House for Families” on the 1787 Vaughan plan likely housed the majority of the enslaved population living at the Mansion House Farm for much of the second half of the eighteenth century. The building was in existence from circa 1760 until it was demolished in late 1792 or early 1793. The archaeological evidence for the structure consisted of a brick-lined storage cellar (44FX762/40-47) measuring roughly six feet by six feet. Historically the cellar served as a handy trash receptacle once it ceased to be used for its original storage function, and through extensive excavation has yielded an extremely rich assemblage of household refuse. The analysis of these remains offers the opportunity to study important aspects of the daily lives of Mount Vernon's enslaved community.

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