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Two hundred and fifty years. That's how long this grand American experiment has been running — and somehow, against all odds, the republic still stands. When the Founders signed their names to that parchment in Philadelphia, they weren't just declaring independence from a king; they were declaring independence from the very idea that ordinary people couldn't govern themselves. Bold move, gentlemen. Bold move.
This striking America 1776–2026 Semiquincentennial Poster captures that audacious spirit in vivid, archival color. The iconic Washington Monument rises against a bold retro sunset — a design language borrowed from the golden age of American travel posters, when the country was still young enough to be breathlessly optimistic about everything. It's the kind of art that makes you stand a little straighter when you walk past it.
As Benjamin Franklin almost certainly would have said, had he lived to see the 250th: "A nation that hangs great art on its walls is a nation worth defending — and one that hangs bad art deserves what it gets." (He didn't say that. But he absolutely would have.) This poster is the former, not the latter — premium giclée printing on museum-grade archival paper, built to outlast the next 250 years of American history.
If you're building a home that honors American history, you'll want to explore our full collection of patriotic wall art and heritage gifts. Our Jeffersonian Java Light Roast Coffee pairs beautifully with a morning spent admiring this poster — because nothing says "I take liberty seriously" like great coffee and great art before 9 AM. Thomas Jefferson himself was a notorious coffee enthusiast, so you're basically living his best life.
For the patriot who appreciates a good laugh alongside their history, our American Gamer T-Shirt and Keep Calm and Carry On T-Shirt make excellent companions to any patriotic décor purchase. And if you're fueling your liberty-loving lifestyle with the right brew, don't miss Franklin's Electric Elixir Medium Roast — because Ben Franklin would absolutely have been a coffee guy if the tea situation hadn't gotten so politically complicated.
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