Dave in Milwaukee

I’ve been invited to give a talk on David Drake at the 48th Annual NCECA Conference, to be held this year in Milwaukee. Potters, artists, and educators from all over the country will be at the four-day meeting, convened by the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts. In advance of the event, the organizers asked me to post a short article about Dave on their blog. This is what I wrote:

DAVE THE POTTER

The Southern slave potter, Dave, described his masterful storage vessels as “Great & Noble.” Today, collectors and museum directors all over the country join in that praise. His pots, which he turned from about 1820 to about 1870, are especially valued for the fact that he signed them and for the rhymed inscriptions he sometimes added to them. Such a daring display of letters was unheard of for a man in bondage in antebellum South Carolina, where slave literacy had always been frowned upon; in 1834, when Dave was 33, it officially became a crime to teach a slave to read or write.

One group of my ancestors lived in South Carolina, most of them in the little town of Edgefield, where Dave also lived and worked. They were the Landrums and the Mileses, pottery entrepreneurs. When, by chance, I discovered that they had owned Dave for much of his life, I was stunned—pleased to find that I was linked to one of the South’s great artisans, yet dismayed that slavery was the mechanism that connected us. Like many white Americans with Southern roots, I had grown up with a suspicion that my ancestors had been slaveholders. It was a disturbing thought, and I had chosen not to face it directly. I couldn’t do that anymore.

I set out to uncover all I could about this amazing man. How had he managed to rise above the limitations of slavery and become a creative artist in his own right? What were the men like who held him in bondage? Though his owners were surprisingly close to me in my family tree—my grandfather was born in Edgefield during Dave’s lifetime—I determined to put aside family loyalty and look clearly at whatever I found, no matter how painful it might prove to be.

Even so, I was not prepared for the story that I uncovered: The world in which Dave turned his now famous vessels was a mix of violence, trust, punishment, creativity, and political strife. The contrasts were startling. On one awful occasion, a female pottery slave who worked with Dave hanged herself after being whipped by their owner, Franklin Landrum, a member of my family. Yet, when Dave and another of my ancestors, Lewis Miles, disagreed about the strength of a handle he had just fashioned, Dave felt secure enough to wittily comment on the incident in an inscription: “Lm says this handle will crack.”

Dave wrote about this complex, black-white life on many others of his pots. He issued warnings (“If you dont repent, you will be, lost”); he courted the woman he loved (“Dearest miss, spare me a Kiss”); and, most surprisingly to us, he confirmed his status as a slave (“Dave belongs to Mr. Miles”). These inscriptions, in themselves, do not appear to be words of protest, but the very act of writing them in the midst of repression formed a resounding cry. Dave’s fearless self-assertion ensured that he would be remembered long after those who controlled him were forgotten.

By searching through my family papers, through documents preserved in archives across South Carolina, and through Dave’s own inscriptions, I strove to create a picture of Dave’s vibrant life in a book, Carolina Clay. Still, I’m aware that a great distance continues to separate me from him. It is an inevitable distance, encountered by every writer who tries to recreate the life of someone else. As the historian, Simon Schama, has said, “We are doomed to be forever hailing someone who has just gone around the corner and out of earshot.”

In truth, that distance seems insurmountable for a white, 21st-century man trying to understand the life of a 19th-century black slave. How does one bridge that gap? The answer for me, for all of us, may be to concentrate not on our differences but on what we have in common. Perhaps the love of pottery is a place to start.

Leonard Todd on the steps of the Edgefield County Courthouse, with two pots by Dave. (photo by Brook Facey)

Leonard Todd is the author of Carolina Clay: The Life and Legend of the Slave Potter, Dave (W. W. Norton). His book was one of four finalists for The Marfield Prize: The National Award for Arts Writing. He also won the Writing Award from the South Carolina Center for the Book. He has spoken about Dave on National Public Radio, at the Smithsonian Institution, and at Harris Manchester College, Oxford. More information about him and about Dave Drake is at http://www.leonardtodd.com and at http://www.facebook.com/leonardtoddbooks. Photo by Brook Facey.

Auction brings global interest in S.C. pottery

Terry Ferrell’s passion has seen the everyday now revered as art.

BY JIM THARPE – THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION/January 25, 2014

One of the most important collections of pre-Civil War Southern pottery goes under the gavel today when Wooten & Wooten Auctioneers and Appraisers sells the Ferrell Collection in Camden, S.C.
Terry Ferrell, a 92-year-old preacher, collector and pottery historian, will be present as 92 pieces of his family’s lifetime collection of 19th-century Edgefield pottery is auctioned piece by piece to the highest bidder.

Image   This Thomas Chandler water cooler has a presale estimate of $60,000 to $90,000.  (photo: contributed)

“It’s bittersweet to see a collection like this disbursed,” said John Burrison, a Georgia State University folklorist. “It’s a great collection on many levels, and ideally it should be in a museum setting.”

The pottery was made in the 1800s in the old Edgefield District of South Carolina, an area that encompassed several counties around modern Edgefield County, about 170 miles east of Atlanta.

Museums, well-heeled collectors and folk art dealers will vie in person, over the telephone and on the Internet for the ceramic “pots,” some of which could bring big bucks. One 1850s water cooler signed and decorated by Thomas Chandler could fetch $60,000 to $90,000, according to pre-sale estimates. It likely sold for about a dollar when Chandler made it: The utilitarian crocks sold for about 10 cents to 12 cents a gallon in their day.

Image   This early face jug from the mid-1800s has a presale estimate of $15,000 to $25,000. (photo: contributed)

“I think it’s the finest piece of Southern pottery there is,” said Ferrell. “These things get to be like your children after all these years. I just love it. But it’s time for it to go to someone else.”

Ferrell said recent health problems and his advancing age convinced him he should sell the collection, which he and his son, Steve, have been amassing and refining since the the 1960s. At that time the crockery was considered junk and could be bought for a few dollars at yard sales and flea markets.

But Ferrell and his son — himself a master potter — felt there was something unique and exceptionally beautiful about the “pots and jugs.” They began not only acquiring them but researching their history and the people who made them. They wrote and lectured about their findings. Museums soon borrowed their collections for shows.

Image   Terry Ferrell, who celebrated his 92nd birthday this week, has been researching collecting and lecturing about Edgefield pottery for much of his life. (photo: Dede Biles/Aiken Standard)

Steve Ferrell would often load dozens of pieces into his car and travel to universities and museums around the South to discuss what he and his father had discovered. The Ferrells helped confirm that the Edgefield potteries were a crossroads in clay, where English, African and Asian pottery techniques and glazes combined to create ceramics unique to the United States.

“There is museum interest in this collection beyond the U.S.” said auctioneer Jeremy Wooten. “You are dealing with Southern stoneware that would be at home Shanghai.”

One of Edgefield’s most famous potters was a slave who sometimes signed his pots “Dave” and occasionally scratched poems on the side. There are several Dave pieces in the Ferrell sale.

Image   Terry Ferrell discusses his Edgefield pottery collection as his son, Steve, looks on. (photo: Dede Biles/Aiken Standard)

“The significant difference between the Ferrell Collection and any other collection is that this is a lifetime study collection,” said Philip Wingard, who describes himself as a “ceramic historian and pottery broker”.

Experts say the Ferrell collection is exceptional because the father and son collected not only unique decorative items but historical items as well.

“The auction people told me they had trouble getting estimates on some of it because it is so unique they had no precedents to go by,” Terry Ferrell said.

As the significance of Edgefield pottery slowly emerged, prices began to escalate. They moved from a few dollars per piece to hundreds per pot and then soared into the thousands and tens of thousands as collectors around the globe began to compete.

“People who know a lot about antiques thought we were foolish back in the ’70s for paying $100 for a piece,” Ferrell said.