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Making Pewter Spoons At Jamestown About 1675

Making Pewter Spoons At Jamestown About 1675.jpg Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Making Potash at JamestownThumbnailsMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625

A pewterer who lived thirty miles from Jamestown—Joseph Copeland by name—made the oldest dated piece of American pewter which has been found. In the 1930's, National Park Service archeologists, working at Jamestown, recovered the significant specimen—an incomplete pewter spoon which is a variant of the trifid or split-end type common during the 1650-1690 period.