Rare Lidded Redware Jar with Copper Glaze, Greene County, TN origin, circa 1820-1860, ovoid jar with footed base and flared collar with semi-rounded rim, the exterior surface decorated with a dramatic splashed lead-and-copper glaze with appealing runs, applied over a lead-and-manganese-glazed ground. Lead-and-manganese-glazed interior. Includes original lid with matching glaze scheme. Incised "23" at shoulder of jar and "9" on lid. Excellent form and glaze, remarkably retaining its original lid. Exhibited: Made in East Tennessee: Pottery, Museum of East Tennessee History, 1996; Tennessee Turned, Earthenware and Stoneware Made in East Tennessee 1800-1900, Museum of East Tennessee History, May 16-October 30, 2011. Literature: Illustrated in Great Road Style: The Decorative Arts Legacy of Southwest Virginia & Northeast Tennessee, p. 136; Illustrated in Wahler, Tennessee Turned, Earthenware and Stoneware Made in East Tennessee 1800-1900, Part One, p. 48, fig. 35, p. 88, pl. 10, and p. 194, fig. 35. Provenance: Purchased in Greeneville, Greene County, TN. Jar with professionally-restored chips to foot and a tiny professionally-restored glaze flake to rim. Some additional, typical unrestored wear to rim and inner rim for lid. Unrestored flakes to interior base. A small piece of adhered clay at shoulder. Lid with professionally-restored flakes/wear to edge, a professionally-restored flake to knob, and minor professional restoration to surface. H (including lid) 8 3/4".