Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia
- +17068783300
- 283 GA-255, Sautee Nacoochee, GA 30571
The Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia is a unique resource unlike any in the
southeast. It showcases the handcraft skills of one of the South’s premier grassroots art forms,
folk pottery. Some of the pieces in the museum’s collection, dating from the 1840s, stand 4 feet
tall. All the work on display is awe inspiring in its functionality and often reflects the humor of life.
A major purpose of the Folk Pottery Museum is to provide a space where folk pottery from
across north Georgia can be seen at one time. The collection is complemented by audio-visual
presentations, programs, demonstrations by local potters, seminars and special tours. Dr. John
Burrison, Georgia State University folklorist and author of Brothers in Clay: the Story of Georgia
Folk Pottery, serves as Curator of the Museum. He notes that “Northeast Georgia is one of the
few areas of the United States with a living, and thriving, tradition of folk pottery…the Museum
interprets both the artistic and historic dimensions of this heritage, offering a unique
understanding of the importance of craftsmanship in the lives of ordinary Southerners of both
the past and present.” According to Dr. Burrison’s research, north Georgia’s pottery tradition
was, and still is, concentrated in two communities near the Sautee-Nacoochee Valley location of
the Museum: Mossy Creek south of Cleveland in White County and Gillsville, just north of
Gainesville in Hall County.
Visitors enthused after a visit to the Folk Pottery Museum will find a variety of shops and
galleries nearby to follow-up their interests. “Education and preservation are our main goals,”
said Museum benefactor Kay Swanson, who fondly recalled her first exposure to northeast
Georgia folk potters as a child while accompanying her dad on what he called “over the
mountain rambles” in his 1939 Dodge. “Sometimes we take for granted that these things will be
here for our grandchildren,” she concluded, “and we shouldn’t.”
The Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia welcomes all. It is open year-round and is free
of charge. Monday through Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.