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Replacement china and dinnerware from China Lane |
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Find the pieces in your pattern
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George Pfaltzgraff, an German immigrant and potter, began producing salt-glazed stoneware in York, Pennsylvania in 1811. The Pfaltzgraff name originated in the Pfaltz area of the German Rhineland, where Pfaltzgraff's castle bearing the family name still stands today. Early in Pfaltzgraff's history, the company produced storage crocks and jugs for preserving food for the winter. Production changed to animal feeders, poultry feeders and red clay flower pots when the demand for stoneware decreased. In the 1940's and again in the 1950's, production changed to household products, giftware, and the company's first line of dinnerware. In 1964, the company changed its name from The Pfaltzgraff Pottery Company to The Pfaltzgraff Company. Between 1964 and 1979, Pfaltzgraff expanded and constructed new facilities in Thomasville, North Carolina. It also purchased Stangle Pottery in Trenton, New Jersey, retail stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Virginia, and acquired factories in Dover, Aspers, and Bendersville, Pennsylvania. China Lane often stocks many of the Pfaltzgraff china patterns, including:
Listed below is China Lane's complete list of Pfaltzgraff china patterns we currently carry. Click on any of the china pattern names to see a listing our china pieces associated with that china pattern. If you do not see your china pattern listed, please REGISTER your china pattern with China Lane, and we will search for your china pattern and then contact you when your registered china pattern becomes available from China Lane.
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