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Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression Book

Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression
Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression, The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at The Pottery. Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam, Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression has a rating of 4 stars
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Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression, The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at The Pottery. Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam, Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression
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  • Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression
  • Written by author Joe Paradis
  • Published by Schiffer Publishing, Ltd., January 1997
  • The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at "The Pottery." Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam
  • The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at "The Pottery." Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam
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The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at "The Pottery." Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers came up with the idea of making artware using their usual "industrial strength" materials and processes. This decision resulted in artware with unusually strong bodies and glazes. For the veteran collector of Abingdon Pottery as well as the novice, this is an Encyclopedia of Shapes, a Dictionary of Colors, a Holy Grail of Collecting, richly illustrated in over 700 photographs and painstakingly researched. It also has a detailed value guide according to mold number and mold type.


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Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression, The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at The Pottery. Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam, Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression

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Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression, The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at The Pottery. Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam, Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression

Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression

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Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression, The industrial pottery at Abingdon, Illinois, made artware from 1934 to 1950 before returning to its mainstay, plum-bingware or sanitary-ware, as it was called at The Pottery. Yankee ingenuity was used to cope with the Great Depression when managers cam, Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression

Abingdon Pottery Artware 1934-1950: Stepchild of the Great Depression

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