“Adaptation and Reinterpretation: The Transfer of Furniture Styles from Philadelphia to Winchester to Tennessee,” American Furniture | McPherson, Anne S.,1977: 299-334 |
Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871 | Waddell, Joseph A., C.R. Caldwell, 1902 |
“Antique Furniture of the Shenandoah Valley,” Virginia Cavalcade 24, no. 3 | Locke, Louis G., 1975: 109-15 |
“The Arts of Shenandoah County, Virginia 1770-1825,” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 5, no. 2 | Gusler, Wallace B., November 1979: 6-35 |
Bernhart & Company: Shenandoah Valley Folk Art Fraktur (1774-1850) | Paul, Bonnie Lineweaver, Heritage Museum, Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society, 2011 |
Buying Into the World of Goods: Early Consumers in Backcountry Virginia | Martin, Ann Smart, John Hopkins University Press, 2008 |
The Clocks of Shenandoah | Whitney, Philip, P. Whitney, 1983 |
Come In and Have a Seat: Vernacular Chairs of the Shenandoah Valley | Evans, Jeffrey S., et al., Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, 2010 |
Counterpanes and White Work of the Shenandoah Valley | Evans, Beverley A. and Jeffrey S., Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates, 2012 |
“Decorated Family Record Books from the Valley of Virginia,” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 7, no. 1 | Weekley, Carolyn J., May 1981: 1-19 |
“Earthenware potters along the Great Road in Virginia and Tennessee,” The Magazine Antiques 124, no. 3 | Moore, J. Roderick, September 1983: 528-37 |
“Exploring Western Virginia Potteries,” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 21, no. 2 | Russ, Kurt C., Winter 1995: 98-138 |
Folk and Decorative Art of the Shenandoah Valley | Shenandoah Valley Folklore Society, Shenandoah Valley Folklore Society, 1993 |
“Folk Crafts,” Arts in Virginia 12, no. 1 | Moore, J. Roderick, 1971: 22-29 |
“Folk Design,” Arts in Virginia 12, no. 1 | Wust, Klaus, 1971: 39-43 |
Folk pottery of the Shenandoah Valley | Wiltshire III, William E., Dutton, 1975 |
The Furniture of John Shearer, 1790-1820: “A True North Britain” in the Southern Backcountry | Davison, Elizabeth A., Altamira Press, 2011 |
“The Furniture of Winchester, Virginia,” American Furniture | Gusler, Wallace B., 1997: 228-65 |
The German Element of the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia | Self-published, 1907 |
“A Great Deal of Stone & Earthen Ware” The Rockingham County, Virginia School of Folk Pottery | Jeffrey S. Evans & Scott Hamilton Suter, Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society, 2004 |
Great Road Style: The Decorative Arts Legacy of Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee | White, Betsy K., University Press of Virginia, 2006 |
The Great Valley Road of Virginia: Shenandoah Landscapes from Prehistory to the Present | Hofstra, Warren R., and Karl Raitz, et al, University Press of Virginia, 2011 |
Heatwole and Suter Pottery | Kaufman, M.F.A., Stanley A., Eastern Mennonite College, Suter/Heatwole Pottery Project, 1978 |
A History of Rockingham County, Virginia | Wayland, Ph.D., John W., Ruebush-Elkins Company, 1912 |
A History of Shenandoah County, Virginia | Wayland, Ph.D., John W., Shenandoah Publishing House, 1927 |
A History of the Valley of Virginia… Third edition, revised and extended | Kercheval, Samuel, Woodstock, VA., 1902 |
Images of loyalism and heritage in John Shearer’s furniture, The Magazine Antiques 177, no. 3 | Davison, Elizabeth A., April/May 2010: 144-53 |
Important Americana: The collection of Dr. and Mrs. Henry P. Deyerle of Harrisonburg, Virginia | Auction catalogue, Sotheby’s, May 26 & 27, 1995 |
“Jacob Strickler, Shenandoah Country, Virginia, fraktur artist,” The Magazine Antiques 110, no. 3 | Walters, Donald R., September 1976: 536-43 |
The John and Lil Palmer Americana Collection | Auction catalogue, Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates, April 5, 2014 |
“The Kahle-Henson School of Punched-Tin Paneled Furniture,” American Furniture | Russ, Kurt C. and Jeffrey S. Evans, 2012: 57-83 |
Legacy in Clay: Pottery of Washington County, Virginia | Exhibition catalogue, William King Regional Arts Center, 2005 |
“The Life of a Potter, Andrew Pitman: Archaeological Evaluation of the Andrew Pitman Site (44FK528), Stephens City, Virginia.” | Park, Sunyoon, et al., Research Report Series No. 11, 2001 |
The Mac & Dolly McKenney Collection at unreserved public auction | Auction catalogue, Green Valley Auctions, Inc., March 24, 2007 |
“Otto Karle: A Previously Unknown Shenandoah Valley Potter,” Ceramics in America | Suter, Scott Hamilton, 2005: 229-32 |
“Painted Chests from Wythe County, Virginia,” The Magazine Antiques 122, no. 3 | Moore, J. Roderick, September 1982: 516-21 |
The Planting of New Virginia: Settlement and Landscape in the Shenandoah Valley | Hollan, Catherine B., The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005 |
Pottery From the Shenandoah and Cumberland Valleys | Manger, Dr. George & Connie, Self Published, 2003. Published in conjunction with the exhibit of the same name at the Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, MD |
The Pottery of the Shenandoah Valley Region | H.E. Comstock, The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts, 1994 |
Quilts from Two Valleys: Amish Quilts from the Big Valley and Mennonite Quilts from the Shenandoah Valley | Good, Phyllis Pellman, Good Books, 1999 |
Quilts of Virginia, 1607-1899: The Birth of America Through the Eye of a Needle | Virginia Consortium of Quilters, Paula C. Golden, Bunnie Jordan, and Hazel Carte, Schiffer Publishers, 2006 |
The Redwell Ironworks | Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 7, no. 1, May 1981: 41-81 |
“Regional matters,” The Magazine Antiques 177, no. 3 | Priddy III, Sumpter, April/May 2010: 120-31 |
“The Remarkable Stoneware of George N. Fulton, Circa 1856-1894,” Ceramics in America | Russ, Kurt C., 2004: 157-78 |
Rockbridge County Artists & Artisans | Crawford, Barbara and Royster, Lyle Jr., University Press of Virginia, 1995 |
The Scots-Irish in the Shenandoah Valley (Scots-Irish Chronicles) | Kennedy, Bill, Causeway Press, 1996 |
“Shearer Energy” The Magazine Antiques 177, no. 3 | Ackermann, Daniel Kurt, April/May 2010: 138-45 |
The Shenandoah Pottery | Rice, A.H. & John Baer Stoudt, Shenandoah Publishing House, 1929 |
Shenandoah Valley Folklife | Suter, Scott Hamilton, University Press of Mississippi, 1999 |
Shenandoah Valley Quilts: The Evans Collection | Exhibition catalogue, Virginia Quilt Museum, June 28, 2003 – October 20, 2003 |
Shenandoah Voices: Folklore, Legends, and Traditions of the Valley | Heatwole, John L., Howell Press, Inc., 1997 |
Southern Folk Art | Rubin, Cynthia Elyce, Oxmoor House, 1985 |
Southern Furniture 1680-1830: The colonial Williamsburg Collection | Hurst, Ronald L., and Jonathan Prown, Harry N. Abrams, 1997 |
“Stony Creek Fraktur Artist Identified” Journal of Early Southern Decorative Arts 31/32, no. 2, 1 &2 | Comstock, H.E, Winter 2005-Winter 2006: 80-102 |
Textile Art from Southern Appalachia: The Quiet Work of Women | Wilson, Kathleen Curtis, The Overmountain Press, 2001 |
Tradition & Fashion: Cabinetmaking in the Upper Shenandoah Valley, 1850-1900 | Suter, Scott Hamilton, Shenandoah Valley Folk Art & Heritage Center, 1996 |
“The Traditional Pottery Manufacturing Industry in Virginia: Examples from Botetourt and Rockbridge Counties,” | Russ, Kurt C., Rockbridge Historical Society Proceedings,1990: 453–89 |
Valley Pioneer Artists and Those who Continue: The Decorative and Fine Arts | Rezba, Theodore ed., Shenandoah College and Conservatory, 1986 |
Virginia Fraktur: Penmanship as Folk Art – New expanded edition | Wust, Klaus and Jean M. Martin, Shenandoah History, 2011 |
Virginia Silversmiths, Jewelers, Clock- and Watchmakers, 1607-1860, Their Lives and Marks | Catherine B. Hollan, Hollan Press, 2010. Assembled from more than 30 years of research, Catherine Hollan has produced the most comprehensive and encyclopedic volume within the field of Southern silver. Comprising 1,798 biographies and more than 930 photographs of the marks of 324 Virginia silversmiths, this 1,092 page tome takes its place among the most ambitious and successful studies of regional American decorative arts ever written. |
When this You See Remember Me: Schoolgirl Samplers of Winchester and Frederick County, Virginia | Robare, Mary Holton, Winchester-Frederick County Historical Society, 2010 |
“Wythe Country, Virginia, punched tin: its influence and imitators,” The Magazine Antiques 126, no. 3 | Moore, J. Roderick, September 1984: 601-13 |