- Juliana Royster Busbee
In 1917, Jacques and Juliana Busbee, artists from
Raleigh, North Carolina , discovered an orange pie dish and traced it back toMoore County , where they found a local tradition of utilitarian pottery in orange, earthenware, and salt glazes. The Busbees saw an opportunity to help save a dying craft, and in 1918 they set up theVillage store inGreenwich Village, New York in order to sell the pottery. Potters they worked with over the years includedJH Owen ,Charlie Teague , andBen Owen .Jacques Busbee died in 1947. In 1960, John Mare bought
Jugtown Pottery and hired Vernon Owens as the Jugtown thrower. After the sudden deaths of John Mare and Juliana Busbee in 1962, Owens leased the business and kept it going for six years, until it was sold to Country Roads, Inc., a nonprofit organization working toward the preservation of hand crafts.Under the direction of Country Roads, Nancy Sweezy served as director and potter. Sweezy changed the earthenware glazes to fritted lead glazes, then developed a new line of high temperature glazes in order to make them lead-free. She also developed a completely different line of complex colors, including "Blueridge Blue", "Cinnamon", a different "Tobacco Spit", "Mustard" and "Dogwood White". Sweezy also set up an apprenticeship program that served over thirty pottery students from 1969 through 1980.
In 1983 Country Roads moved on to another project, and Vernon Owens bought Jugtown. He has run it with his wife Pam Owens since then. Pam and Vernon opened the
Jugtown Museum in 1988.Jugtown Pottery was listed in theNational Register of Historic Places in 1999.References
[http://library.uncg.edu/depts/archives/mss/html/Mss070.htm Finding Aid for the Juliana Royster Busbee Papers, 1911-1981] The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
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