Philadephia Redware Pie Plates
Philadephia Redware Pie Plates
Pie plates were a common everyday item used in the kitchen for centuries in Europe. In Colonial Pennsylania, potters were influenced by traditional German sgraffito plates. Sgraffito is a technique in which the body of a pot is covered with slip of a different color clay. The coating is carved away exposing the under body color of the pot. Slipware usually occurs as an earthenware core that has been decorated with slip or liquid clay. Slipware was introduced to this country by the Netherlands in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Soon after the English Staffordshire tradition was born. Slipware began to be made in Sussex, Kent Somerset and Devon Counties. The wares produced in these English counties also influenced the local American potteries that produced earthenware pie plates. I am guessing that local earthenware pie plate production started soon after Colonial settlement in Philadelphia. These wares were not difficult to make and were essential to everyday life. Raw materials such as clay and wood, for firing, were abundant in the surrounding area. Whole Colonial examples of slipware or sgraffito pie plates are very rare. The earliest example I have seen at the Philadelphia Museum of Art is from 1792. There is an entire reference book documenting the Museum's extensive collection. Most of the plates seen in this photo album are c1840-60. Most are dug from privies in Philadelphia and restored. In about 1860 the popularity of earthenware decorated vessels and plates plummeted. People began to favor the cleaner looking yellow ware pottery made famous by the Bennington, NH potteries. The Bennington style pottery was fired to a higher temperature and resisted under glaze staining much better that the lower fired earthenware red pie plates.
13.5 Inch Pie Plate
13.5 Inch Pie Plate 
 
Dug in 1975 by Pete Hulleberg during Interstate 95 construction project though downtown Philadelphia. This plate is c1825 and has been professionally restored by Jim Evans. Sold at Bob Brooks Auction October 27, 2020, photo courtesy of Bob Brooks Auctions.

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