Jamestown Cooking Pot, ca. 1630-45

The first potter working at Jamestown made this
earthenware handle, which comes from a mixed context
within the fort dating to the second quarter of the
seventeenth century. There is no evidence that the
colonists made their own pottery until about 1630. Until
that time they had to rely on imports from England for
the ceramics they needed to prepare, store, and consume
their food and drink.
The Jamestown potter produced lead-glazed earthenware
in utilitarian forms such as cooking pots, storage jars,
pans, porringers, pipkins, pitchers, and mugs. He was
probably trained in England as his forms mirror the
shapes of the pottery produced in London and in the
potteries along the border of Hampshire and Surrey
counties.