Here is the real, dismantled and rebuilt kitchen of Julia Child, America's favorite chef. When Julia Child moved back to her home state of California in 2001, she donated the kitchen from her Cambridge, Massachusetts, home to the Museum. The exhibition features the actual kitchen, including the cabinets, appliances, cookbooks, kitchen table, and hundreds of utensils and gadgets. The exhibition gives visitors a peek into the working kitchen of one of the world’s best-known cooks, and explores how her influence as an author and host of several television series changed the way America cooks.
All three of us gals could have spent an hour admiring all the details in this little number:
Representing the home of a large, affluent American family of about 1910, this dollhouse was built by Faith Bradford, who spent more than a half century accumulating and constructing the miniature furnishings for its intricately detailed rooms. She donated it to the museum in 1951.
With all the collections displayed, exhibits, hands-on spots, art, cars, boats, planes, trains, buggies, engines...whew, the list is endless...there is something there for everyone to enjoy...and to learn about our American history.
Haley and I were especially happy that we did not live in this particular wash tub and lye soap laundry era, although I did reside in the clothesline era:
And we are both glad that we have progressed technologically beyond this contraption:
Hmm, this reminds me that I still don't have a new laptop. Mr. Dell is out of parts on the particular model I am interested in, so I hurry up and wait...and research some more. Rats!