Edwin Scheier was born in
The Bronx, New York City, to a Jewish German immigrant father, and an American mother. Scheier's father died shortly after his son's birth. Although his mother remarried, Scheier was left to his own devices, and dropped out of school before high school, in order to make a living. During the
Great Depression, he criss-crossed the nation before returning to New York City. Although never formally trained, Scheier attended free seminars at
Cooper Union, and also worked for a
silversmith and a ceramicist. He often examined works in the city's museums, and first, and briefly, met his future wife, Mary Goldsmith, in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. A period as a public puppeteer led him to take a position teaching crafts through the
WPA. This led to other positions in the WPA, and it was through one of these roles, as a field supervisor of craft programs, that he again met Mary, who was directing a ceramics studio at the
Big Stone Gap Federal Art Gallery in
Abingdon, Virginia. They were married on August 19, 1937, eventually resigned their posts with the WPA, and after a period as itinerant puppeteers, established a long-term partnership as
fine ceramicists. == New Hampshire ==