My Photo


  • Grannyisms


  • Buy Paul & Pap's Music


  • Mountain Folk

  • www.flickr.com


  • Spread the Love
    Giveaway

  • Blog Flux Directory
  • Add to Technorati Favorites

Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin

  • OctoFinder Verified

« Appalachian Vocabulary Test 13 | Main | Thanksgiving Rolls »

November 19, 2009

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00e54ffe2ad38833012875b7cc56970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference A Go Devil & A Mystery:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Never heard a maul called a go-devil, but think it very a very appropriate name. Can't really say what the crock might have held or if it's a crock at all. Might have been a moonshinin' urn though, ya just never know. xxoo

Great site and music!I'm a blacksmith would like to send you some pix of my work for you to view and maybe post here.

I don't know why,but this is killing me. I read the comments with dropped jaw waiting for someone to know the answer. What gets me is the lid part. . . that's got to have been for something specific. I like the idea of it being some kind of a feeder or waterer, you know, you fill it and turn it over into a dish and it trickles out as needed? Which might explain the attached lid, if there were an opening in it?


Miss Cindy- yes I will let everyone know : ) Im waiting on info from the Museum of Appalachia-hopefully they can solve the mystery!


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com

That is an interesting peice of potery but I don't know what it is.

I've heard of a go devil all my life, but this is Western North Carolina, like you, just a little further east than you.

The clay pot is interesting. Wonder what it could be. It can't be a crock, those ridges would be impossible to keep clean and germ free.
The Deer Hunter says it is about the same size as my one gallon crock.
I bet it was a whiskey jug. that would account for the closed top. Wouldn't have to worry about germs in the ridges----the alcohol content would take care of that! LOL
Oh well, I love a good mystery. You will let us know if you find out, wont you Tipper?

Tipper: Nice 'What Is It', you sure got me on this one. I worked for a place that fired clay and that was an interesting process.

wow! how neat! imagine if it had been whole...what a treasure that would of been. i love old pottery and the things they used it for. way to go deer hunter.

On the mystery piece -- I'll go with it being a broken crock. Looks like it was wheel-thrown, by someone who turned them out fast, and glazed with Albany slip or something very much like Albany slip. The slip was wiped from the bottom, just not very well.

Go devil? Never heard that one. But I like it.

Go devil. Sounds like something a man would think or say while doing the hard work of chopping wood.


Ethelene-the piece was just laying on the ground-it was covered by leaves but wasnt buried in the dirt. It never occured to me that the circles could have been part of the construction of the piece-thank you : )


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com


PictureGirl-the inside is what made us question whether it was a crock or not. Weve never seen a crock that wasnt smooth on the inside.


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com


Pappy-one of the older men that hunts with The Deer Hunter thinks it was part of a mash making contraption too.


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com


Annie-thank you for mentioning that go devil was also used in Virginia. Maybe the pottery is a crock-we just have never seen one that isnt smooth on the inside-so we werent sure.


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com


B.Ruth-yes The Deer Hunteruses wedges too-I just dont know where they are : ) He used to have one of Paps old go devils around here-but I couldnt find it either. The oldone was bigger and broader just like you said.


Blind Pig The Acorn


Music, Giveaways, Mountain Folk


All at www.blindpigandtheacorn.com

PS....
Go-devil...very doggone heavy piece of equipment...and needed a strong man to use it..heard my Dad say..."That's a toughin', need a go devil to split it." meaning lay the light weight axe down...The one he had was bigger, broader than your picture..yours looks like a new one...They would drive the wedge into the wood with the heavy go-devil..to split it..Do you have a picture of the wedge...or did you use just the go-devil..?

My Father-in-Law who was from south west Virginia always called the splitting maul a "go devil" so we do too.

I would have thought your mystery object was a crock. Why do you think it isn't ? We need more clues !

Could be a pottery chicken feeder...a moonshine pass thru jug of sorts..an old battery case...? Looks newer to me...like maybe thirties or forties...Send a picture to John Rice Irwin at the Applachian Museum in Norris, Tenn. He can tell you what it is!

Ethelene seems to know her pottery. Her mention of possible buried treasure makes it mysteriouser and mysteriouser!

How about a large crock for soaking hides for tanning? How about a crock for fermenting corn mash? I'm afraid the mystery will continue.

I knew what the go devil was. I just hadn't thought about one in years. We haven't chopped wood in many a year.

My guess on the pottery piece is it looks like a crock maybe used for saurkraut. I've got an old brown pickle crock that this one looks somewhat like. Why do you think this is not a crock?

You have a good mystery goin'.

Never heard a splittin' maul called a Go Devil before. But you can bet I'll surprise the guys with that one. tee hee
I don't have any idea what that crock is, unless it's just a very old way of making them.

Our go devil (I never knew there was any other name for it) is old - it's handle has been replaced several times - (that's another story - replacing ax & go devil handles - instead of buying new ones). The head on our old go devil does not have the ridge on it like the one in your picture. It's more like a wedge (now what would they call that today?) on a handle. My husband still loves to chop wood - as long as he's got his go devil and an axe, he's a happy man! No log splitter ever comes to our house!

Liked learning about your go devil. My daughter and I are into learning regional language and talking with it amongest ourselves!

The circular construction of "the mystery crock" seems to indicate that it was made by stacking strings of rolled clay. Probably it needs close examination to determine date. Was it buried or sitting on top of the ground when the deer hunter found it? It could just be a broken crock discarded in the woods. Or it could possibly have been buried during the Civil War with something valuable in it that deteriorated through the years (or was stolen by the one who found the crock).

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.


  • Pickin & Grinnin
    In the Kitchen



Sit a Spell

  • All images and content are subject to copyright and are the sole property of Blind Pig & The Acorn. If you like what you see or read (I hope you do) and would like to use it please email me and ask at tipper@blindpigandtheacorn.com Thanks! (copyright does not apply to free downloads)
Blog powered by TypePad