QUARTERLY BULLETIN 97 FIG. 8 HAND-PAINTED ENGLISH SOFT PASTEWARE Oblinus farmhouse, 176th Street. blue scratched design such as was produced by the Brothers Bad- deley of Shelton, about 1750. Stonewares with a brown glaze were made at several places in England, and fragments disinterred in the military debris show different kinds of clays, sometimes with a lead-glazed surface inside and out. But the particular ware made at Nottingham is unmistakable in its delicate, thin and correctly-turned forms, its careful grooving and its even, flat brown salt glaze. Several such bowls and pitchers have been found around the Inwood camps, and fragments of similar vessels were among the rubbish in Fort Washington (Fig. 1, No. 16). Black-glazed stoneware was, and still is, a common material for teapots which formed a housewife's chief treasure in many a humble home. Of one such utensil the fragments found at the ruin of the Nagel dwelling have been restored to a complete form, and now illustrated in Fig. 6.