Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Antique Chinese Pottery Corked Pot with Carry Case

In Pottery > Show & Tell and Asian > Chinese Pottery > Show & Tell.
Pottery9160 of 12586Need help identifying this Native American bowl...Thanks!Two small vases from Roskilde Pottery (Denmark), 1917-1921
0
Love it
0
Like it

Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 11 years ago

    antiquelad…
    (7 items)

    This pot came out of a collection from a woman that traveled the world. She marked everything she had by the day she received it. This is marked Dec. 1949 I think but she probably received it as a gift and that was the day she got it. I would love to know what it was made for and when it was made? It measures approx 4 inches tall. It has a clay lid and a cork to seal it. Very cute little jar or pot.

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Pottery
    See all
    2 Staffordshire Art Deco Pottery CLARICE CLIFF Candlesticks Comet & Gardenia
    2 Staffordshire Art Deco Pottery CL...
    $320
    STPGOODS Winter Forest Dessert Plate Set of 2 Bone China Christmas Plates 7.5
    STPGOODS Winter Forest Dessert Plat...
    $24
    Red Riding Hood Wolf Teapot pottery by face jug folk art maker Mitchell Grafton
    Red Riding Hood Wolf Teapot pottery...
    $1,425
    Antique Art Deco CLARICE CLIFF Staffordshire Art Pottery, 2 Plates & 1 Dish
    Antique Art Deco CLARICE CLIFF Staf...
    $178
    logo
    2 Staffordshire Art Deco Pottery CLARICE CLIFF Candlesticks Comet & Gardenia
    2 Staffordshire Art Deco Pottery CL...
    $320
    See all

    Comments

    1. Songjar, 8 years ago
      Based on information from Coxsackie.com, this jar was made in China for export to the United States sometime after 1891. The US Mckinley Tariff went into effect March 1891, requiring all imports to be marked with country of origin name. (In 1914 the law was changed to add the phrase "Made in.") From 1891-1949 all China imports were thus marked, although there was little trade between the two countries during this period due to domestic instability in China. (Trade resumed in the 1970s with different markings.)

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.