ELWYN B. ROBINSON DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
CHESTER FRITZ LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA
GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA 58202

CHARLES GRANTIER ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW

COLLECTION: OGL# 1366

DATES: 1977

SIZE: .25 linear feet, 2 audio cassette tapes

INTRODUCTION

ACQUISITION: The Charles Grantier Oral History Interview was deposited in the Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection by C. Dan Grantier of Billings, Montana in February, 1998 (Accession #98-2200).

ACCESS: Open for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Department of Special Collections.

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

Charles Grantier was born in Williston, North Dakota and grew up on a ranch about twenty miles north of Watford City, North Dakota. In 1929, he enrolled in the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks and elected to major in art. He became interested in ceramics and took a job as a student assistant in the UND Ceramics Department. After graduating in 1932, Grantier worked as a school teacher until 1935, when he accepted a position as a ceramic artist for the Dickota Pottery Company of Dickinson, North Dakota. Using western North Dakota clay, Dickota Pottery made bowls, vases, pitchers, souvenirs and other ceramic products. Dickota Pottery ceased production in 1937. Grantier then resumed teaching school until 1939, when he was offered the position of State Supervisor of the Work Projects Administration Federal Arts Project (WPA/FAP) in North Dakota. This was a New Deal program of the Franklin Roosevelt Administration, designed to employ artists and to train nonartists to earn wages in craftsmanship. Under Grantier's directorship, the FAP in North Dakota expanded production, eventually employing as many as eighteen people at one time. Various ceramic products were produced, including bowls, cups, pitchers, plaques, lamps, vases, bookends and paperweights. Initially, all pottery was fired at Dickota Pottery (from 1936-1937), Fort Yates, North Dakota and the University of North Dakota. Shortly after Grantier became State Supervisor, the WPA obtained a kiln of its own, and from then on, all firing was done in Mandan, North Dakota. Grantier served as WPA/FAP State Supervisor until the project's termination in 1942. Following this, Grantier worked for two years as a caretaker at Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park in Mandan and then resumed teaching school until his retirement.

Sources:

Barr, Margaret Libby, Donald Miller and Robert Barr. University of North Dakota Pottery: The Cable Years. Fargo, ND: Knight Printing Company, 1977.

Charles Grantier Oral History Interview (Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection # 1366).

Dommel, Darlene Hurst. Collector's Encyclopedia of the Dakota Potteries: Identification and Values. Paducah, KY: Collectors Books, 1996.

SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

The Charles Grantier Oral History Interview consists of one transcript of an interview of Charles Grantier by Robert Carlson on January 1, 1977. In the interview, Grantier reflects on his life and family history and discusses his experiences making pottery at the University of North Dakota, at Dickota Pottery and for the Works Progress Administration in Mandan, North Dakota. Grantier talks about the process of making pottery in 1930's-early 1940's North Dakota, describing the types of pottery made, the circumstances under which he labored and the people with whom he worked.

BOX AND FOLDER INVENTORY

Box 1
Folder

  1. Transcript of interview 1977

SEPARATIONS RECORD

Two audio cassette tapes were separated and deposited in Special Collections Audio Tape Collection as Tape Numbers 1811 and 1812.


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