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RECENT
DISCOVERIES
OF EARLY
W. F. McCOY and BROWN & McCOY STONEWARE
By
Paul & Debbie Moody
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Recent
finds have once again provided excitement for the
early McCoy stoneware collector. Last summer at the
July pottery festival a previously unknown shape
in W.F. McCoy stoneware showed up in the McCoy Society’s
annual pottery auction. It was a two-gallon, butter
churn. The number “2” was hand etched
into the clay, rather than the commonly found method
of stenciling the size in cobalt under the glaze.
It has on both sides, at the top, hand formed and
applied, tab handles. The dimensions are 13-inches
tall by 7½ inches at the widest point. It
does have a little minor damage, but is a magnificently
beautiful piece.
The churn was
on display for several days leading up to the auction,
and produced quite a buzz among the McCoy collectors.
As the featured piece, it was the first item to be
auctioned. Enthusiastic bidding continued until it
finally sold for two thousand dollars. This piece
joins the inventory of “known” W. F.
McCoy stoneware as the only butter churn found to
date.
As mentioned
in a previous article in the July 2007 McCoy Society
Journal, the real thrill is that on the average one
to two pieces of the early “W. F. McCoy” stoneware
continue to show up each year. Therefore, this find
gives great incentive to continue the hunt. (This
piece was included in the inventory listing given
last July, but the size was unknown at that time).
Another spectacular
find of the very earliest McCoy stoneware was made
several months before pottery week, and it was displayed
in the McCoy Society’s annual “Show and
Tell” during the 2007 Pottery Week. This piece
was a second known example of a “Brown and
McCoy” stoneware crock.

Referencing
previous Society Journals, J.W. McCoy married Sarah
Elizabeth Brown in 1870, and they lived in Roseville,
Ohio. Sarah’s father was in the mercantile
business, and he took J.W. McCoy as a partner. The
name of the business was Brown & McCoy. Among
other wares they sold pottery inscribed Brown and
McCoy, Wholesale distributors in stoneware, Roseville
O.
J.W. later produced
stoneware marked “W.F. McCoy, Wholesale
Dealers in Stoneware, Zanesville O.” for
Wilber McCoy’s hardware store around the 1885
time-period.
This second stoneware
piece was the same size as the original discovery
piece, a number “3” marked, straight-sided
crock, with no handles. The “3” was hand
written in cobalt, and was very obviously done with
a finger. Both “3’s” were identically
hand written (although differed in size), suggesting
that they very well may have been done by the same
person.
This discovery
had quite an interesting trek to the home of a McCoy
collector. The discoverer had contacted the editor
of the McCoy Society’s Journal inquiring about
the history
and value. Several
collectors verified the authenticity of the crock
via photographs, and hoped that it might be available
for purchase. The discoverer made no additional contact,
and several weeks later, it showed up for sale on
eBay. It sold for under its potential value, as the
seller failed to include sufficient information,
and its pedigree. With only two of these pieces presently
known, and being the earliest pieces verified in
the McCoy Pottery lineage, their values are potentially
well above the later W.F. McCoy pieces.
SO GET OUT THERE
AND LOOK - WHO KNOWS WHERE THE NEXT EXCITING PIECE
WILL TURN UP!
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