Blue Ceramic Museum Coffee Mug with Logo

$15.00

Get your motors running with this wonderful blue mug embossed with the Museum’s logo. The mug is perfect for your preferred caffeine octane and additives.

About the morning joe: The origin of the term “joe” for coffee is as clear as a cup of mocha. Our favorite: in 1914, Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels banned all alcohol from naval ships. Frustrated sailors sarcastically called the coffee substitute "a cup of Joseph" (or Joe) as a jab at him. Whether or not it is true, we’ll raise our cup anyway.

Get your motors running with this wonderful blue mug embossed with the Museum’s logo. The mug is perfect for your preferred caffeine octane and additives.

About the morning joe: The origin of the term “joe” for coffee is as clear as a cup of mocha. Our favorite: in 1914, Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels banned all alcohol from naval ships. Frustrated sailors sarcastically called the coffee substitute "a cup of Joseph" (or Joe) as a jab at him. Whether or not it is true, we’ll raise our cup anyway.

Shot Glass from America's Packard Museum
Shot Glass from America's Packard Museum
Sale Price: $8.00 Original Price: $10.00

About Your Coffee Mug

So, you like coffee? You are not alone! In 2023, More than 70% of American adults drink coffee each week, making coffee America’s favorite beverage (other than bottled water). Highlights of coffee’s economic impact in the United States include:

  • The total economic impact of the coffee industry in the United States in 2022 was $343.2 billion, up 52.4% since 2015.

  • The coffee industry is responsible for more than 2.2 million U.S. jobs and generates more than $100 billion in wages per year.

  • Coffee can only be grown in tropical climates. It cannot be grown in most of the United States and is sourced from countries with tropical climates. Every $1 in coffee imported to the United States ends up creating an estimated $43 in value here at home.

  • Consumers spend more than $300 million on coffee products every day—nearly $110 billion per year. CREDIT: National Coffee Association.

  • While the U.S. and Canada celebrate National Coffee Day on September 29, other nations mark this day throughout the calendar. International Coffee Day happens just two days later on October 1.