More than 30 years ago, a collector from South Dakota paid $750 for a 30-gallon Red Wing stoneware crock at an auction.
It was double-stamped, salt-glazed, and bore the same hand-painted cobalt butterfly pattern that would one day make a 91-year-old Nebraska womanâs nearly identical crock sell for $32,000.
The collector put it in an old granary on his farm. It sat there for decades.
Then in January, a small-town auction in Holdrege, Nebraska, made international news.Â
A crock that had spent 30 years on a back porch â one its owner nearly sold at a garage sale for $20 â brought $32,000 for Lois Jurgens on her 91st birthday.Â
The story was picked up by The Washington Post, NBCâs TODAY, and outlets in South Africa and India.
The collector in South Dakota saw the photos and recognized what he had â a missing piece to a puzzle being assembled by Nebraska auctioneer Ken Bramer.
Collectors believe there are as many as six of these intricately decorated Red Wing crocks, with three well-known among crock insiders.
âA guy from up by Watertown, South Dakota, called me and said, âI got the fourth crock,ââ Bramer told Cowboy State Daily. âAnd thatâs how he started the conversation out. He said, âThat one you sold down there for such big money? I got the twin sister to it.ââ
By the next morning, the man was sitting in Bramerâs driveway at 8 a.m., having loaded his crock and driven 400 miles all night from Watertown.
The collector only wants to be identified as Rick. He lives on a farm and doesnât want people to know what he has or where to find him.
In that way, heâs a lot like the man who bought Jurgensâ crock â a passionate collector from Kansas who was out hunting pheasant when he called in the winning $32,000 bid and has also declined to be publicly identified.
In the world of antique crocks, anonymity is apparently part of the game.
âIt also has a double stamp. It has the blue butterfly. It has the elephant ears. Itâs salt glaze,â Bramer said of Rickâs crock. âBut it also has a crack down the back, and he said, âI bought it that way.ââ
Rick also brought along an 18-inch Red Wing bowl so large it doesnât appear in the standard collector guides.
Both pieces are headed to auction on Saturday, April 18, at the Phelps County fairgrounds in Holdrege, as âcrock maniaâ continues to grow.

Downhome Scoop
The journalist who broke the Jurgens story â and whose original post has been viewed close to 13 million times â has been tracking every twist.
Colleen Williams spent more than 20 years as a news anchor in central Nebraska before launching a good-news digital magazine called âThe Bright Side.âÂ
A Facebook tip from someone who attended one of Bramerâs auctions led her to Jurgens, and the story took off from there.
âThat post resonated with so many people because they grew up with a crock that their grandma had in the corner,â Williams told Cowboy State Daily. âIt just has this feeling of being at grandmaâs.ââš
Across social media, thousands of people tagged family members asking if someone still had a crock in the basement. The excitement wasnât just nostalgia â it was the tantalizing possibility that a forgotten heirloom might be worth thousands.
âHow many people thought, âMaybe Iâve got one thatâs worth $30,000 in the basement,ââ Williams said. âThey would tag someone saying, âDoes Mildred still have her crock?ââ
The word âcrockâ itself had to overcome some cultural baggage to get here.
Williams said she researched how the expression âwhat a crockâ entered the American vocabulary and discovered that chamber pots â the pre-electricity precursors to the toilet â were made of the same ceramic material.
âSo it literally was a crock of, you know what,â Williams said.
When she first broke the story to her family, the word tripped everyone up. Her son thought she was talking about Croc shoes. Her husband assumed she meant a Crock-Pot.
Now, with the phrase âwhat a crockâ still widely used to call out things that seem profoundly inauthentic, the undeniable authenticity of Red Wing pottery has broken through to the masses and restored the word crock to a place of honor.
âCrocks are having a moment,â Williams said. âAnd it all can be pinpointed to the moment that that sweet woman, Lois, put her crock into an auction and was hoping for $100, maybe $1,000, and then it was $32,000.â

Beehive Buzz
The mania hasnât stopped at crocks.
Red Wing expert Larry Peterson, who has collected Red Wing pottery for 55 years and co-authored three books on the subject, said the wave of public interest has rippled outward.
âBeehive jugs, decorated, have a lot of interest too,â Peterson told Cowboy State Daily. âThe interest is continually growing.â
At a recent show in Des Moines, decorated salt-glaze jugs and beehive jugs in the 3- to 5-gallon range drew strong attention. A beehive jug priced at $4,000 didnât sell at the show, but Peterson isnât concerned.
âIt will get sold,â he said.
The original Jurgens crock will go on display at the Pottery Museum of Red Wing in Minnesota for a year starting in April.
As for what Rickâs cracked twin might bring at auction, Peterson has his doubts it will match $32,000 given the condition â the crack in back may be worse than the one on Jurgensâ crock, and the butterfly may not be as large.
âBut itâs going to get a lot of interest,â he said. âStories like this donât happen very often, and to see two of these come out at basically the same time is an example of the publicity it got, and people looking to see what they have.â
Holy Crock
With her $32,000 windfall in hand, Jurgens made a sizable donation to her church in Holdrege.
âIt was always the plan to use the money for the Lordâs work,â said Vickie Stepanich, Jurgensâ daughter.âšLois, still active at 91, is currently on a cruise ship somewhere in the Pacific Ocean â a trip that was planned and paid for pre-crock.
âWe are aware of another crock being auctioned in April,â Stepanich said. âWe plan to be in attendance. It will be interesting to see the next chapter unfold.â
Williams said sheâll be there too and plans to pick up Jurgens and drive together to the April 18 auction.
âKen is saving us a seat, he said,â Williams told Cowboy State Daily.
Stepanich and the Kansas collector who bought the original crock will also grab seats on the front row.
Before then, Bramer has an auction this Saturday with close to 100 crocks along with furniture, antiques and collectibles, listed at bramerauction.com. The April 18 sale will also feature a 40-gallon crock from Oklahoma and a 150-gallon crock with a lid from Texas.
Since the Jurgens sale, Bramer said he has received thousands of calls, texts and emails from people asking if their crocks are worth anything. Heâs managed to respond to about 250 so far.
âEverybody thinks theirs is now worth $32,000,â Bramer said. âBut I think thereâs still treasures out here to be found. A lot of people take them for granted. Grandpa and grandma had them, great-grandpa and great-grandma had them, and they just pass them down from one generation to the other. And now theyâre starting to pay a little attention.â
David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.








