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7 years 8 months ago #168107 by wildchild662
pipes was created by wildchild662
One whole, the rest are broke




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7 years 8 months ago #168116 by rmartin
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We need to see some better pics here. In the group of four: the right one appears to be a so-called trade pipe late 1800's probably Point Pleasant, Ohio, the one on the left could be NA but hard to tell from the pic, and top and bottom ones don't look like pipes to me at all.

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7 years 8 months ago #168136 by taxidermist01
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As Martin said, better pictures won't hurt but even with the pictures you have, one of them appears to be a clay Pamplin Pipe. You can search Pamplin Pipes on Google and search images and you will see what I am talking about. Here is some information on Pamplin Pipes. The article is courtesy of the University of Missouri.

Pamplin Clay Tobacco Pipes

Clay tobacco pipes are a common artifact type found in historic Euro-American archaeological sites. These inexpensive and disposable items were generally manufactured, used, and thrown away within a very short span of time, and individual styles can often be traced to specific manufacturer and period of production. Thus, clay pipes can serve as a valuable tool in helping to date a historic archaeological site.

Clay pipes imported from England typically have a small bowl and long stem and are made of kaolin (a fine, white clay); this type of pipe is common to Colonial-period archaeological sites. A number of different kinds of clay pipes were also produced locally. A common type produced in the eastern United States in the 18th and 19th centuries has a comparatively large bowl with a short stem into which a longer stem (usually of reed) was inserted. The area of Pamplin, Virginia, is one the localities where this type is known to have been produced in large quantities. Manufactured by individual pipemakers beginning in about 1740, and by the Pamplin Smoking Pipe and Manufacturing Company, which operated from 1878 until 1951, pipes from the Pamplin area are distinguished by the high-quality, deep red, local clay from which they were made. The Akron Smoking Pipe Company of Ohio also owned a plant in Pamplin from 1890 to 1920, and produced Pamplin-type pipes during that time period.

In 1972, Missouri avocational archaeologists Henry and Jean Hamilton published an article about Pamplin pipes that remains the definitive source on the subject. The Hamiltons examined 4,451 pipes from the Pamplin area (recovered from the Pamplin Company’s factory grounds and from the site of a local store that sold home-industry pipes) and identified 39 styles that represented the majority of pipe forms produced in the Pamplin area from the mid-18th to mid-20th centuries. The Hamiltons’ personal Pamplin pipe type collection, which includes examples of most of these forms and is now housed by the Museum of Anthropology, is presented in its entirety in this online exhibit.


References and Related Links

Hamilton, H. and J. Hamilton. 1972. Clay pipes from Pamplin. Missouri Archaeologist 34(1–2):1–47.

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7 years 8 months ago - 7 years 8 months ago #168161 by rmartin
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Good info Taxi. It could also be from Point Pleasant, Ohio which was the other major producer. They were also made elsewhere, Anna, Illinois also. From what I have read Pamplin pipes were made of a reddish clay which was very different than Ohio clay. Here are a few I have found.

Sometimes I can.....sometimes I can't....Sometimes I just don't try
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7 years 8 months ago #168162 by rmartin
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7 years 8 months ago #168173 by taxidermist01
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rmartin wrote: Good info Taxi. It could also be from Point Pleasant, Ohio which was the other major producer. They were also made elsewhere, Anna, Illinois also. From what I have read Pamplin pipes were made of a reddish clay which was very different than Ohio clay. Here are a few I have found.


Hello Martin,
Absolutely beautiful examples. I am very impressed. I knew there were other makers but I could not think of any except the Pamplin Pipes. That is why I was curious as to where they are finding their artifacts. I have found half a dozen or so broken examples but none so fine as this collection. I really appreciate your follow up.
Bobby

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7 years 8 months ago #168261 by wildchild662
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rmartin wrote: Good info Taxi. It could also be from Point Pleasant, Ohio which was the other major producer. They were also made elsewhere, Anna, Illinois also. From what I have read Pamplin pipes were made of a reddish clay which was very different than Ohio clay. Here are a few I have found.


Second row from the top far right look similar to one of the broke stems I found
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7 years 8 months ago #168265 by rmartin
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I would say you are correct WC. I love finding them but complete ones are really hard to find in these parts.

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