Updated March 25: This has been sold. I don't know when we will get another. Please enter your e-mail address to be notified. I suggest you also look at the mugs from the same potter. Right now, we are also sold out of those, too, but I expect that we'll be getting more of those before we get another teapot or plate. Thank you for your interest in these. — Lee Wright | Founder
Made by hand in America using traditional methods and materials.
Redware was the most commonly used pottery prior to the 19th century. The name comes from its high iron content and coloration.
The plates are lead free and food-safe and can be put in the microwave.
Taken from the original illustration in Franklin’s The Pennsylvania Gazette, May 9, 1754.
Originally, a warning to the colonies, urging them to unite against the French and Native American allies, and later used as an appeal to the states during the Revolutionary War. The rattlesnake segments are labeled, S.C., N.C., V., M., P., N.J., N.Y., and N.E.
Size: 10.5" diameter
Care: Handwashing recommended.
Note: We only have one available and I don't know when we'll be able to get more. And because they are made by hand, each is a little different.
Also available in a a mug and a teapot.
Historical background
This political cartoon (attributed to James Turner (silversmith) for Benjamin Franklin) originally appeared during the French and Indian War, but was recycled to encourage the American colonies to join the Albany Plan for Union. From The Pennsylvania gazette, May 9, 1754. Abbreviations used: Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and New England.
The practice of grouping the colonies east of New York (New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut) together as "New England" has a history that goes back to the Dominion of New England, established in 1686 . . . Delaware was not listed separately because it was comprised of three counties that were part of Pennsylvania, and did not gain independence from Philadelphia until after the Declaration of Independence was asserted. Prior to formal separation from Pennsylvania, Delaware was properly referred to as the "Lower Counties on Delaware".
The Province of Georgia was not originally included by Franklin (let alone other British colonies in North America) but was later added and can be see at the tip of the tail. Georgia, the youngest of what would come to be referred to as the "Thirteen Original Colonies", had only been chartered in 1732 as a haven for those incarcerated in England's debtors prisons, and its population was sparse.
Source: Wikipedia