THE POTTERY INDUSTRY. 309 



tary ware is made by the Camden Pottery Company, at Camden, 

 and washtubs and sinks are produced by the Perth Amboy 

 Ceramic Company, of Perth Amboy. 



The clays used by these other potteries outside of Trenton are 

 in most cases obtained from the Middlesex district. 



The following list includes all of the potteries outside of Tren- 

 ton, so far as the Survey could determine them : 



Ironside pottery, Bordentown — Sanitary ware ; 



Smith & Son, Bridgeton — Earthenware; 



Camden Pottery Company, Camden — Sanitary ware ; 



Julius Einsiedel, Egg Harbor City — Earthenware; 



The Fulper Pottery Company, at Flemington, established in 1805 as an 



earthenware factory, but now making stoneware exclusively; 

 Chas. Wingender & Bro., Haddonfield — Stoneware and Earthenware; 

 Marion Pottery Works, Jersey City — Porous cups for batteries; 

 Dunlop & Lisk, Matawan — Stoneware and earthenware ; 



Belmont Avenue pottery, Belmont Ave., Newark— Stoneware and earthenware; 

 Excelsior Pottery Works, Newark — Earthenware; 

 Union Pottery & Drainpipe Works, Newark — Earthenware ;. 

 Perth Amboy Ceramic Company, Perth Amboy — Sinks and tubs ; 

 C. L. & H. A. Poillion, Woodbridge; 

 Rahway Pottery Works, Railway. 



The value of the pottery manufactured in New Jersey in 1902 

 is as follows i 1 



Value of New Jersey Pottery in 1902. 



Earthenware and stoneware, $59,820 



C. C. ware, 581,267 



White granite and semivitreous porcelain ware, 1,431,270 



China, 680,368 



Bone china, Delft and belleek ware, 90,840 



Sanitary ware, 2,807,322 



Porcelain electrical supplies, 358,496 



Total, $6,009,383 



Of this amount Trenton produced $5,545,580, which, together 

 with $151,831 of miscellaneous pottery products not enumerated 

 in the above table, was 23.61 per cent, of the entire production for 

 the United States. 



1 Mineral Resources, U. S. Geol. Surv., 1902, Chap, on the Clay-working 



Industry. 



