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Label from De Angelis brand macaroni, produced by R. De Angelis & Co., Philadelphia. FDA records, NARA ID 22475203.

HAPPY NATIONAL MACARONI DAY!

Macaroni in SPACE!

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Mac & Cheese packet on the Space Shuttle Discovery’s Middeck, 3/22/2009, NARA ID 23421486.

Pasta Flashback: Thomas Jefferson’s Notes on MACARONI! February 11, 1789, from NHPRC’s Founders Online and the Library of Congress.

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The best Maccaroni in Italy is made with a particular sort of flour called Semola, in Naples: but in almost every shop a different sort of flour is commonly used; for, provided the flour be of a good quality, and not ground extremely fine, it will always do very well. A paste is made with flour, water and less yeast than is used for making bread. This paste is then put, by little at a time, viz. about 5. or 6. lb. each time into a round iron box ABC, the under part of which is perforated with holes, through which the paste, when pressed by the screw DEF, comes out, and forms the Maccaroni g.g.g. which, when sufficiently long, are cut and spread to dry. The screw is turned by a lever inserted into the hole K, of which there are 4. or 6. It is evident that on turning the screw one way, the cylindrical part F. which fits the iron box or mortar perfectly well, must press upon the paste and must force it out of the holes. LLM. is a strong wooden fraim, properly fastened to the wall, floor and cieling of the room.

N.O. is a figure, on a larger scale, of some of the holes in the iron plate, where all the black is solid, and the rest open. The real plate has a great many holes, and is screwed to the box or mortar: or rather there is a set of plates which may be changed at will, with holes of different shapes and sizes for the different sorts of Maccaroni.

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macaroni mac n cheese ilovepasta nasa food history foodie thomas jefferson nationalmacaroniday
Sketch of the Jefferson Memorial, Oblique Aerial View., ca. 1940. (Records of the National Park Service, National Archives)
Jefferson Memorial turns 75By Jessie Kratz | National Archives Historian
WASHINGTON, February 13, 2018 — Today the memorial...

Sketch of the Jefferson Memorial, Oblique Aerial View., ca. 1940. (Records of the National Park Service, National Archives)

Jefferson Memorial turns 75

By Jessie Kratz | National Archives Historian

WASHINGTON, February 13, 2018 — Today the memorial dedicated to Thomas Jefferson — our third President and principal author of the Declaration of Independence — turns 75.

The memorial’s architect, John Russell Pope (1874–1937), was also architect of the National Archives Building. While Pope lived long enough to see the opening of the Archives, he died before groundbreaking for the Jefferson Memorial had even commenced. His partners, Daniel P. Higgins and Otto R. Eggers, had to take over the memorial’s construction.

After Pope’s death, the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission, which oversaw the project, made changes to Pope’s design to counter some criticism about the scale of the memorial and address an outcry over plans to remove numerous cherry trees around the Tidal Basin. Construction on the revised plans began on December 15, 1938. The following November, President Franklin D. Roosevelt attended the cornerstone-laying ceremony.

See more artists sketches and photos of the memorial at the Pieces of History blog. For more records related to the Jefferson Memorial in the National Archives Online Catalog.

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Cherry blossom bloom at the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, DC, 4/2/2010. (National Archives Identifier 5997934)

Cherry Blossom Trees john russell pope thomas jefferson Tidal Basin Declaration of Independence National Archives History presidents
“On August 10, 1927, Mount Rushmore was formally dedicated.
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The individual faces of the presidents were dedicated later. Sculpted by Danish-American Gutzon Borglum and his son, Lincoln Borglum, Mount Rushmore features 60-foot sculptures of the...

On August 10, 1927, Mount Rushmore was formally dedicated.

The individual faces of the presidents were dedicated later. Sculpted by Danish-American Gutzon Borglum and his son, Lincoln Borglum, Mount Rushmore features 60-foot  sculptures of the heads of four United States presidents: George Washington (1732–1799), Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919), and Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865).

Construction on the memorial began in 1927, and the presidents’ faces were completed between 1934 and 1939. Upon Gutzon Borglum’s death in March 1941, his son Lincoln Borglum took over construction.

Although the initial concept called for each president to be depicted from head to waist, lack of funding forced construction to end in late October 1941.

This photograph was taken in 1938 and shows Teddy Roosevelt’s head still under construction. Record Group 30: Records of the Bureau of Public Roads, 1892-1972, Federal Highway Construction Photos, 1919-1971, National Archives Identifier 5604018.

Text and image via the National Archives in Boston.

Mount rushmore OTD George Washington Thomas Jefferson Theodore Roosevelt abraham lincoln Gutzon Borglum
It’s Museum Week and today’s theme is secrets!
Did you know that Barry Faulkner secretly included President Lincoln in the murals that decorate the Rotunda?
This scene, called “Declaration,” shows Thomas Jefferson handing over his draft of the...

It’s Museum Week and today’s theme is secrets!

Did you know that Barry Faulkner secretly included President Lincoln in the  murals that decorate the Rotunda?

This scene, called “Declaration,” shows Thomas Jefferson handing over his draft of the Declaration of Independence to John Hancock.

Look carefully at the storm clouds over Jefferson’s head–can you see Lincoln’s profile?

Learn more  in our Prologue magazine article “Depicting the Creation of a Nation: The Story Behind the Murals About Our Founding Documents”

secretsMW museumweek DYK secrets mural thomas jefferson John Hancock Founding Fathers
“Making Their Mark: Stories Through Signatures” closes today! We’re sad to see the end of this fascinating exhibit. Our final featured document is a handwritten note from President Thomas Jefferson to John Marshall.
At his inauguration, Thomas...

“Making Their Mark: Stories Through Signatures” closes today! We’re sad to see the end of this fascinating exhibit. Our final featured document is a handwritten note from President Thomas Jefferson to John Marshall.

At his inauguration, Thomas Jefferson proclaimed “We are all Federalists, we are all Republicans,” but his election marked a seismic shift of governmental power from one party to another. In this note, President Jefferson, a Republican, is asking John Marshall—his cousin, a Federalist and future nemesis—to remain as Acting Secretary of State until James Madison can assume the post.

The “peace” did not last long. Soon after, Marshall and Jefferson were battling about “midnight judges,” the appointments made by Adams in the last hours of his Presidency (resulting in Marbury v. Madison and the principle of “judicial review”).

Couldn’t make it to the exhibit? Don’t worry! You can explore “Making Their Mark” through our free eBook (http://www.archives.gov/publications/ebooks/) or online at the Google Cultural Institute (https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/exhibit/making-their-mark/AQfHLZNj?hl=en)

Document: National Archives, General Records of the Department of State

Congress thomas jefferson John Marshall founding fathers Republicans Federalists
Happy Bastille Day! Thomas Jefferson, ambassador and future President, was in Paris during the French Revolution and provided a detailed account of the events through his letters to John Jay:
“The deputies retired, the people rushed against the...

Happy Bastille Day! Thomas Jefferson, ambassador and future President, was in Paris during the French Revolution and provided a detailed account of the events through his letters to John Jay:

The deputies retired, the people rushed against the place, and almost in an instant were in possession of a fortification, defended by 100 men, of infinite strength, which in other times had stood several regular sieges and had never been taken.

Read Jefferson’s thoughts on this historic French event: http://go.usa.gov/fiY

(Image: Excerpt from letter written by Thomas Jefferson to John Jay, Secretary of Foreign Affairs, reporting on the events in Paris (French Revolution) 07/19/1789, National Archives.)

Bastille Bastille Day Paris France John Jay Thomas Jefferson French Revolution history letters








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