Suttles Pottery
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member WayBetterFinder
N 29° 21.297 W 098° 06.877
14R E 585941 N 3247637
The Suttles Pottery historical marker is facing US 87 and is next to a telephone pole and chainlink fence at the edge of the office of the Texas Farm Bureau Insurance Company.
Waymark Code: WM18VEX
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 10/01/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 3

Suttles Pottery was founded in Texas by two brothers who moved here from Ohio. They and their families settled in La Vernia and began firing bricks and creating useful and decorated stoneware. Their kiln works were popular locally and word spread of their artistic pottery created using various techniques that made their pottery attractive and useful.

Photos of actual pottery created by Suttles Pottery:
(visit link)
Marker Number: 13047

Marker Text:
Following the Civil War, two brothers, both Union veterans, moved from Zanesville, Ohio to Texas. Isaac Suttles (c. 1840-1884), who wed Mary Ann McBride in 1866, appears in the 1870 census for Seguin, where he worked at Wilson Potteries. Records indicate his wife may not have moved to Texas with him. His brother George Washington Suttles (1844-1930), who married Elizabeth Strate (1845-1905) in 1861, first appears in Wilson County records in 1877. They reportedly moved to Texas in 1876 for her health.
George joined his brother at a kiln in the sand hills near La Vernia, where they fired bricks and household and decorative stoneware. An 1877 newspaper article highlighted the brothers' workmanship and noted the high demand for their products. Around 1882, they moved their operation into La Vernia to a kiln near this site.
The Suttles were members of the Asbury Methodist Church, now La Vernia United Methodist Church. In September 1884, Isaac was killed in Abilene, Texas, possibly during a robbery attempt. George continued operating the kiln in La Vernia for many years. He and Elizabeth reared four children, and their descendants remain in the area.
Few records exist about the Suttles Pottery operation in La Vernia, but firsthand accounts and archeological excavations, as well as ongoing investigations, indicate George had an updraft-type kiln and probably used a salt glaze, Albany slip techniques and perhaps an alkaline glaze technique in his work. His operation here would have included a clay mixing area, a potter's wheel, the kiln and waster piles of broken pottery sherds.
Although no apparent physical evidence of the kiln remains, the Suttles operation was a significant part of La Vernia's past and of the history of Texas industry and artistry.
(2004)


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WayBetterFinder visited Suttles Pottery 10/02/2023 WayBetterFinder visited it