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  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. The Market for Jerry Brown Pottery. When Jerry and Sandra Brown first opened their shop in the early 1980s, they were uncertain about their venture. The Brown’s distress about the declining traditional market for stoneware was eased by the discovery of a demand for Alabama folk arts and crafts.

  4. Jerry Brown is one of only a handful of traditional potters still working in the United State. His roots in the southern stoneware tradition run deep. Brown is a direct-line seventh generation potter, and the Brown Pottery lineage may be as long as nine or ten generations.

  5. Alabama. Tradition. Artisan , Potter. Year. 1992. Loading... See More Images. Jerry Brown grew up in Lamar County, Alabama, son of Hattie May and Horace "Jug" Brown. The soil of this far northwest corner of the state is known for its rich veins of clay prized for pottery making.

  6. Jerry Brown Pottery. West Alabama | December 2019. Arts & Culture. Jerry Brown grew up in Sulligent watching his father create pots for customers all over west Alabama. After twenty years as a logger in Marion County, Jerry decided to start his own pottery business.

  7. Oct 17, 2022 · Listen • 3:55. Amazon. “Of Mules and Mud: The Story of Alabama Folk Potter Jerry Brown”. Author: Jerry Brown. Edited and with an Introduction by Joey Brackner. Publisher: University of Alabama Press. Tuscaloosa AL, 2022. Price: $22.95 (Paper) Pages: 136.

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