[243] Virginia Wills and Administrations, loc. cit. (footnote 53).

[244] "Virginia Gleanings in England," VHM (1921), vol. 29, p. 435.

[245] "Tithables in Lancaster County, 1716," WMQ 1 (1913), vol. 21, p. 21.

[246] From Orders, Wills, & Inventories, York County Records, no. 18, pp. 553 ff. The linear totals given in the right-hand column are not always the sum of the amounts noted in each line, but they are presented here as faithfully as possible.

[247] Adrian Oswald, "A London Stoneware Pottery, Recent Excavations at Bankside," The Connoisseur (January 1951), vol. 126, no. 519, pp. 183-185.

[248] J. F. Blacker, The A. B. C. of English Salt-Glaze Stoneware (London: 1922), pp. 46, 48, 51, 56, 57, 63, and 65.

[249] Kiln waste found in recent excavations in Philadelphia indicate that Anthony Duché was manufacturing stoneware there in the style of Westerwald in the 1730s.

[250] No trace of a kiln was found on the Bankside site in Southwark; it is probable that the waste came from another location nearby, possibly from the factory established in Gravel Lane around 1690, which continued under various managements until about 1750. It may be noted that, in the same way that much Southwark delftware has been erroneously attributed to Lambeth, it is likely that brown stonewares in the so-called style of Fulham was made in Southwark before Lambeth rose to prominence in that field. See F. H. Garner, "Lambeth Earthenware," Transactions of the English Ceramic Circle (London: 1937), vol. 1, no. 4, p. 46; also John Drinkwater, "Some Notes on English Salt-Glaze Brown Stoneware," Transactions of the English Ceramic Circle (London, 1939), vol. 2, no. 6, p. 33.

[251] W. R. excise or capacity stamps continued to be impressed on tavern mugs long after William III was dead. The latest published example is dated 1792. Drinkwater, op. cit. (footnote 69), p. 34 and pl. XIIIb.

[252] The Williamsburg Pottery, on Route 60 near Lightfoot, specializes in the reproduction of 18th-century stoneware and slipware.