Remember the Ladies Glass Cutting and Serving Board
- National Archives Store Exclusive
- Made in U.S.A.
- 12 X 12 inches
- Tempered glass with rubber feet
- Includes collapsible carrier
- Not dishwasher or microwave safe
- Hand wash only
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This stunning glass cutting board is a very distinctive offering from the National Archives Store. Featuring our new interpretation of the Barry Faulkner mural of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 displayed in the National Archives Rotunda, it includes the very important additions of the images of Abigail Adams, Dolley Madison, Martha Washington and Eliza Hamilton.
As a cutting board or charcuterie board, this piece makes a wonderful addition to the kitchen. It comes with a convenient carrier that expands to the perfect fit for the board and collapses for easy storage.
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In 1776, as America became independent from Great Britain, Abigail Adams wrote to her husband John Adams, “I long to hear that you have declared an independency. And, by the way, in the new code of laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you to make, I desire you would remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors.”
Here in this breathtaking artwork, we honor Mrs. Adams' wishes in our reimagined scene of the framers of the Constitution.In 1933, the chief architect of the National Archives, J. Russell Pope, recommended approval of a two-year contract to hire Barry Faulkner, a noted American muralist, to paint a mural for the Exhibit Hall in the planned Rotunda of the National Archives Building. The result was two large oil-on-canvas murals, each about 14 feet by 37 1/2 feet. One mural honors the signers of the Declaration and the other those who signed the Constitution.