Storage Jar

Storage Jar, David Drake, 1859, Edgefield district, South Carolina, National Gallery of Art
Maker David Drake
Date of Creation 1859
Location Edgefield district, South Carolina
Materials Alkaline-glazed stoneware
Institution National Gallery of Art
Credit Line Anonymous Gift of Funds
Accession Number 2023.2.1
Photo Credit Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington

Dave (c. 1801–1870s), later recorded as “David Drake,” was an enslaved African American potter who lived and worked most of his life in the Edgefield district of South Carolina. Active between the 1820s and his emancipation in 1865, Dave was one of the many enslaved African Americans who produced alkaline-glazed stoneware containers in the region. In addition to his extraordinary talents at working clay, he is recognized for signing his works boldly with “Dave” and especially for inscribing many of them with poetry, often using rhyming couplets. He did this openly at a time when many state laws criminalized teaching enslaved people to read and write. This is one of the largest surviving storage jars created by Dave. Featuring two gracefully curving handles under the rim, the vessel is inscribed with one of Dave’s characteristic couplets as well as the date and his signature: “I made this out of number, & cross ‘ ‘ / if you do not lisen at the bible you’ll be lost / L.m. march 25th 1859 / Dave.” The date “1859” is inscribed a second time, more lightly, below the “9” of the main inscription. The meaning of the first line of the couplet is uncertain but could express the great faith or suffering that Dave invested in making the pot. It is one of his latest of 40 known poem jars, which range in date from 1834 to 1863. His most ambitious poem jars tend date to 1856 when he was working for his last enslaver, Lewis Miles, who operated a factory known as Stony Bluff. The letters “L.m.” on this jar refer to Miles. The vessel was probably used to store meats, and the opening sealed with parchment and wax.