[165] Colonial Williamsburg archeological collection, 10C-58-10B.

[166] Brown stonewares similar to those commonly attributed to Fulham, but more correctly called London, were manufactured at Yorktown by William Rogers in the second quarter of the 18th century. See footnote 67.

[167] A comparable vessel, ornamented with medallion containing Tudor rose and initials of Charles II, is illustrated in Blacker, The A B C of English Salt-Glaze Stoneware, p. 35.

[168] A similar example from a context of 1763-1772 is illustrated by Noël Hume, "Excavations at Rosewell," fig. 29, no. 1.

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

[170] Op. cit. (footnote 67).

[171] A close parallel that was found at Lewes, Delaware, is illustrated in Watkins, "North Devon Pottery," p. 45, fig. 25.

[172] See Sheelah Ruggles-Brise, Sealed Bottles (London: Country Life, 1949), pl. 4, fig. at lower left, and W. A. Thorpe, "The Evolution of the Decanter," The Connoisseur (April 1929), vol. 83, no. 332, p. 197, fig. 2.

[173] Another example is illustrated by Noël Hume, "The Glass Wine Bottle," op. cit. (footnote 56), fig. 3, type 3.

[174] Ibid., fig. 3, type 6, illustrates a similar example.