Potteries of Trenton Society--Links
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    Links

    The Trenton City Museum: Historical Artifacts from Trenton
    www.ellarslie.org/collection

    Schiffer Books, Thomas L. Rago’s book: Collector's Guide to Trenton Potteries

    Multimedia, TOUT-FAIT: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online
    re: a Trenton Potteries urinal: www.toutfait.com/issues

    1923: An Industry Gets Shattered, By Jon Blackwell / The Trentonian 
    re: the collapse of the Trenton ceramic industry:  www.capitalcentury.com/1923

    Mitigating Effects on an Industrial Pottery, by Patricia A. Madrigal and Richard W. Hunter:  crm.cr.nps.gov/archive

    History of Lenox
    Walter Scott Lenox was born in 1859 in the "Staffordshire of America": Trenton, N.J. Laced with transportation lines and located near sources of fuel and clay, the state capital became the country's leading ceramics center in the 19th century, with some 200 potteries:  www.lenox.com

    The New Jersey State Museum. "From fossils to fine art, from Native American tools to the finest silver, from quilts to comets, from prehistory to the future, the New Jersey State Museum is four museums in one and offers a galaxy of experiences for every member of the family": www.state.nj.us/state/museum

    The Newark Museum.  Admission is free at the museum, located at 49 Washington Street in the Downtown / Arts District of Newark, New Jersey:  www.newarkmuseum.org/

    Bibliography of Ceramics of the United States compiled by the Smithsonian Institution: www.si.edu/resource

     

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