Potter, teacher, and writer Jack Troy once said, “If North America has a ‘pottery state,’ it must be North Carolina.” North Carolina Potteries Through Time proves to readers that his assessment is cor
Before retiring in 2013, Neolia Cole, the eighty-six year old daughter of potter Arthur Ray Cole, was first to arrive and last to leave the Cole's Pottery shop. She possesses the indomitable spirit th
At the beginning of the 20th century, many Americans moved from farm to town, changing from agricultural employment to jobs in factories and retail shops. Along with these new occupations came a new i
North Carolina's eighteenth and nineteenth-century Moravian potters were remarkable artisans whose products included coarse earthenware, slip-trailed decorated ware, Leeds-type fine pottery, press-mol
A century ago, a modestly successful Raleigh portrait and landscape painter named Jacques Busbee arrived by train in Seagrove, North Carolina, not knowing that his future, and the history of pottery-m
Used by physicians and health care professionals worldwide to facilitate the uniform description of neoplastic diseases, the fully revised and updatedA Seventh Edition of the AJCC Cancer Staging Handb