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  1. Jerry Brown Pottery, Hamilton, Alabama. 5,521 likes · 4 talking about this · 212 were here. Come to Jerry Brown Pottery - the only known mule-powered pottery mill in the United States!!! Watc

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  2. Index of / Name Last modified Size Description : JerryBrownAndBlue-2.jpg: 2024-06-19 22:57 : 77K : MoldingHeartsHandsMi..>

  3. Jerry Dolyn Brown (November 9, 1942 – March 4, 2016) was an American folk artist and traditional stoneware pottery maker who lived and worked in Hamilton, Alabama. He was a 1992 recipient of a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and a 2003 recipient of the Alabama Folk Heritage Award. [ 3 ]

  4. In selecting Jerry Brown of Hamilton from a strong field of heritage award nominees, a panel of southern folk art scholars cited Jerry's significance as one of a few remaining Alabama folk potters and his service to the people of Alabama as a representative of the state's folk art traditions.

  5. Mar 2, 2023 · As a small boy, Jerry and his siblings worked with their father, Horace “Jug” Brown, in traditional pottery-making, using mules to grind the clay and wood-fired kilns to “burn” the assorted pottery.

  6. Jerry Brown Pottery is the only known mule-powered pug mill still operating in the United States. Ninth-generation potter Jerry Brown and his mule, Blue, mix and grind the clay used to make his unique and one-of-a-kind pieces of pottery.

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  8. Jerry Brown (1942-2016) was a renowned stoneware folk potter who lived and worked in Hamilton, Marion County. He was from a family that had been engaged in pottery making in the South since the late eighteenth century, and he used traditional manufacturing techniques, including a mule -drawn mill for mixing clay.

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