Bibliography:
Articles
Austin, Peter. “The Ironwork of Tony Lord.” In Robert S. Brunk, ed. May We All Remember Well, Volume II. Asheville: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, 2001. 35-57.
Blumer, Thomas J. "Catawba Influences on the Modern Cherokee Pottery Tradition." Appalachian Journal 14, no. 2 (Winter 1987): 153-173.
Blumer, Thomas J. “Rebecca Youngbird: An Independent Cherokee Potter.” Journal of Cherokee Studies 5 (1980): 41-49.
Boris, Eileen. “Crafts Shop or Sweatshop? The Uses and Abuses of Craftsmanship in Twentieth Century America.” Journal of Design History [Great Britain] 1989 2(2): 175-192.
Brunk, Robert S. “Arthur Hanley Gibbs’ Dancing Figures,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume II (Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 2001), p. 240.
Caldwell, Joseph R. “Cherokee Pottery From Northern Georgia.” American Antiquity 20 (1954/1955): 277-280.
Cheek, Pauline Brinkley. “The Hooked Rug Workers of Madison County, North Carolina: A Narrative Record,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 8-35.
Coolidge, Ruth Dame. Vibrations from a Danish Bell: The John C. Campbell Folk School. [S.I.: s.n., 1945]. Note: “reprinted from American Scandinavian Review,” vol.33, 1945. This article details the creation and purpose of the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, NC. The discussion of folk art and crafts produced by students of the school is fairly limited. There is some mention of the carvings and other wood workings produced by the school, in addition to traditional weaving. The true focus of the article is on the benefit of the school to the local community.
Coulter, D. W. “Cherokee Weavers Used Looms Over 200 Years Ago.” Handweaver 18 (3): 17-18.
Crafts of the Southern Highlands. [New York: American Craftsmen’s Council, 1966?]. Note: reprinted from Crafts Horizon Magazine.
Crawford, Wanda. “Going Back Chiltoskey." Appalachian Heritage 7, no. 4 (Fall 1979): 8-13.
Crawford, Wanda. “The World of Lloyd Owle." Appalachian Heritage 8, no. 1 (Winter 1980): 14-19.
Dillihunt, H.B., Jr. Mountain Crafts for Pleasure and Profit. [S.l.: s.n., 1965?].
Duncan, Barbara. “Freeman Owle: Storyteller and Stonecarver, Qualla Boundary.” North Carolina Folklore Journal 49 (2002): 37-39.
Fariello, Anna. “Arts and Crafts in Appalachia: The Third Wave.” Style 1900 16 (February 2003): 70-75.
Fewkes, Vladimir J”. Catawba Potterymaking, with Notes on Pamunkey Potterymaking, Cherokee Potterymaking, and Coiling.” American Philosophical Society, Proceedings 88. (1944) 69-
Fogelson, Raymond D., and Amelia B. Walker. “Self and Other in Cherokee Booger Masks.” Journal of Cherokee Studies 5 (1980): 88-102.
Foscue, Edwin J. “Gatlinburg: A Mountain Community.” Economic Geography, vol. 21, no. 3 (July 1945): 192-205.
Freeman-Witthoft, Bonita. "Cherokee Indian Craftswomen and the Economy of Basketry." Expedition 19, no. 3 (Spring 1977): 17-27.
Harwell, Jane M. “Ed Briggs: Reviving a Traditional Craft with a Contemporary Eye.” North Carolina Folklore Journal 42 (Winter-Spring 1995): 35-52.
Horton, Laurel. “In Search of the Appalachian Quilt.” Then and Now 6, no. 3 (Fall 1989): 19-21.
Greene, Joan. "Goingback Chiltoskey, Master Carver." Now and Then 3, no. 3 (Autumn 1986): 8-10.
Griffiths, Thomas, and William L. Anderson. “Cherokee Clay, From Duché to Wedgwood: The Journal of Thomas Griffiths, 1767-1768.” The North Carolina Historical Review 63, no. 4 (Oct. 1986): 477-510.
Harrington, M.R. “The Last of the Iroquois Potters.” North Carolina Archaeology 52: 55-67.
Hartung, A. Bruce. "Baskets of the Eastern Cherokees." Antiques Journal 35 (November 1980): 17, 43.
Hawthorne, Ann and Robin Dreyer. “Penland School of Crafts.” Appalachia: Journal of the Appalachian Regional Commission 29 (January-April 1996): 34-39.
Hill, Sarah H. “Weaving History: Cherokee Baskets From the Springplace Mission.” William and Mary Quarterly 53 (1996): 115-137.
Holbrook, Maime. “The Art of Making a Cherokee Arrow.” Foxfire Magazine 30 (Fall/Winter 1996): 119-123.
Israel, Jerry. “The Mace Family of Chair Makers.” Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 176-200.
Jackson, Jason Baird. “Making Faces: Eastern Cherokee Booger Masks.” Gilcrease Journal 5 (2): 50-61.
Johnson, Bruce E. “`To Serve Unnoticed and To Work Unseen’: Eleanor Vance, Charlotte Yale and the Origins of Biltmore Estate Industries,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume II Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 2001, pp. 241-266.
Johnson, Geraldine N. “Plain and Fancy’: The Socioeconomics of Blue Ridge Quilts.” Appalachian Journal 10, no. 1 (Autumn 1982): 12-35.
Kendra, Caryn M. “Hard Times and Home Crafts: The Economics of Contemporary Appalachian Quilting.” Uncoverings 1991 12: 177-189.
Kirkpatrick, Erma H. “Study of Alamance Plaids’ and Their Use in North Carolina Quilts.” Uncoverings 9 (1988): 45-55.
King, Duane H. “Vessel Morphology of Eighteenth Century Overhill Ceramics.” Journal of Cherokee Studies 2 (1977): 154-169.
Lauterer, Maggie Palmer. “The Carvings of Wade Hampton Martin,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 98-113.
L’Ecuyer, Kelly H. “Uplifting the Southern Highlander: Handcrafts at Biltmore Estate Industries.” Winterthur Portfolio 2002, 37 (2-3): 123-146.
Leftwich, Rodney Henderson. “The Nonconnah Pottery of Tennessee and Western North Carolina, 1904-1918,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume II (Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 2001), pp. 70-90.
Lindsey, Jack L. “The Woodwork of Samuel Wilson Jacobs,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 80-81.
Lloyd, Timothy. “Whole Work, Whole Play, Whole People: Folklore and Social Therapeutics in 1920s and 1930s America.” Journal of American Folklore, vol. 110, no. 437 (Summer 1997): 239-259.
Leftwich, Rodney L. “Cane Basketry of the Cherokees.” School Arts 56 (Feb. 1957): 27-30.
Leftwich, Rodney L. “Cherokee White Oak Basketry.” School Arts 54 (1954): 23-26.
Riggs, Brett H. and Christopher B. Rodning. “Cherokee Ceramic Traditions of Southwestern North Carolina, Ca. A.D. 1400-2002: A Preface to “The Last of the Iroquois Potters.” North Carolina Archaeology 51 (2002): 34-54.
Stalcup, Anthony. "Goingback Chiltosky [sic] Is My Name." Foxfire 15, no. 2 (Summer 1981): 122-127.
Stalcup, Anthony, and Cheryl Wall. "Goingback Chiltoskey." Foxfire 17, no. 3 (Fall 1983): 166-177.
Taylor, Terry B. “Sunset Mountain Pottery,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 50-62.
“Amanda Swimmer, Potter.” North Carolina Folklore Journal 44 (1997): 95-96.
Watkins, Charles Alan. “Weaving Day at Penland: A Photographic Analysis.” NWSA Journal 1999 11(3): 18-23
Willms, Melinda Burris “A Practical Spirituality: Merchandising Mountain Handicraft.” Style 1900, Vol. 12. No 1, (1999): 61-66.
Wilson, Kathleen Curtis. “The Handweaving of Allie Josephine Mast, 1861-1936,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 138-155.
Witthoft, John. “Stone Pipes of the Historic Cherokee.” Southern Indian Studies 1 (2): 43-69.
Young, Virginia Durant. “A Sketch of the Cherokee People on the Indian Reservation of North Carolina.” Woman's Progress January 1894: 169-174
Zug, Charles G., III. “E.A. McKillop: “A Born Carving Man,” in Robert S. Brunk, ed., May We All Remember Well, Volume I Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc., 1997, pp. 36-49.
VIDEO RECORDINGS
Southern Highland Craft Guild. Videorecording. Produced and directed by Ron Ruehl. Asheville, N.C.: Southern Highland Craft Guild, 1999.
Western Carolina University, Mountain Heritage Center. New Threads in Old Patterns. Videorecording. [Cullowhee, N.C.]: Mountain Heritage Center, 1986.
Cherokee Artists of the Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual. Videorecording. Cherokee, N.C.: Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual, 1994-1995
Bibliography prepared by George Frizzell.
Annotations written by Jason Woolf and Patrick Velde.
Edited by Bob Strauss and Ann Hallyburton.