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Brush McCoy Pottery RARE 1956 Little Red Riding Hood Cookie Jar~A13

$ 158.38

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Original/Reproduction: USA
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Main Color: RED
  • Object Type: Cookie Jar
  • Condition: Used
  • Color: Multi-Color
  • Style: POTTERY
  • Manufacturer: Brush/Brush-McCoy
  • RARE: 1956

    Description

    Brush McCoy Pottery RARE 1956 Little Red Riding Hood Cookie Jar . RARE to FIND.  Little Red Riding Hood. Marking at bottom read brush k-24 USA. Very detailed Cookie Jar. Add this to your Vintage cookie jar to your collection, display or use it time and time again with in these upcoming holiday season, fill it up with your little one favorite cookie or treats. Or will make an great gift to the Cookie jar collector or Little Red Riding Hood collector. Will do Fast, Free Secured Shipping.
    Don't forget to check out my other Cookie jars, or vintage. Rare, unique listings. I will be listing new items on a daily basis. Thanks for looking!!:)
    This is a complicated story, but in a nutshell, George S. Brush became general manager of the J.W. McCoy Pottery Company in 1909. He had previously worked for J.B. Owens Pottery, Globe Stoneware, The Crooksville (Ohio) Clay Products Company and his own Brush Pottery, which burned down in 1908.
    As a result of a merger in 1911, J.W. McCoy Pottery Company became Brush-McCoy, and it grew into one of the largest manufacturers of pottery in the United States, with plants in both Zanesville and Roseville, Ohio. However, a fire in the Zanesville plant in 1918 forced a move of all company operations to Roseville.
    When the McCoys withdrew from this arrangement in 1925, Brush continued in the old plant in Roseville as Brush Pottery until 1982, when the operation finally closed. Over the years, it made decorative items, kitchenwares, patio and garden wares, vases and cookie jars.
    The products were sometimes marked with the name “Brush” and representations of artist’s brushes and/or artist’s palettes. The company made a variety of cookie jars that are now sought after by collectors who look for pieces in such shapes as Humpty Dumpty, Davy Crockett, Little Boy Blue, Raggedy Ann, Peter Pan, Hillbilly Frog (a popular collector’s item) and Little Red Riding Hood, among others.
    The mark actually reads “K24 Brush USA,” and the Brush Pottery Company used it. This firm originated in 1925, when the McCoy family withdrew from the Brush-McCoy Pottery Company.