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Maine Maritime Museum

Maine Maritime Museum
Maine Maritime Museum Logo, ME, USA Sep 2012.png
Established 1962
Location Bath, Maine
Coordinates 43°53′39″N 69°49′00″W / 43.894083°N 69.816789°W / 43.894083; -69.816789
Type Maritime museum
Director Amy Lent
Curator Nathan R. Lipfert
Website Maine Maritime Museum

The Maine Maritime Museum, formerly the Bath Marine Museum, offers exhibits about Maine's maritime heritage, culture and the role Maine has played in regional and global maritime activities. The Maine Maritime Museum has a large and quirky collection, made up of more than 20,000 documents, artifacts and pieces of artwork and includes an extensive research library.

The museum is set on a scenic active waterfront on the banks of the Kennebec River and includes the historic Percy and Small Shipyard with five original 19th-century buildings, a Victorian-era shipyard owner's home and New England's largest sculpture – a full size representation of the largest wooden sailing vessel ever built, the six-masted schooner Wyoming.

The Marine Research Society of Bath was founded in 1962 by seven residents from Bath, Maine. The early years saw the founders renting a storefront in 1964 to exhibit the collection. In 1964 one of Bath's wealthy shipbuilding families, the Sewalls, gave the museum their mansion to exhibit the museum's collection.

It was called Bath Marine Museum until 1972 when the name was officially changed the Maine Maritime Museum.

By 1983, the museum showed their collection via three sites: Sewall House, the Winter Street Centre and the Apprenticeshop.

In June 2010, due to the recession the Portland Harbor Museum and Maine Maritime Museum merged. The collection from the Portland Harbor Museum was moved to the Maine Maritime Museum on the basis that the Bath museum is a climate-controlled facility and the "premier facility for visitors to experience the history of Maine shipbuilding and seafaring" and the Portland Harbor Museum "received few visitors."

In 2012, the Gazela Primeiro visited the Maine Maritime Museum to commemorate the museum's half-century anniversary.

The collection contains "many sextants, spyglasses, captain's chests".

Over the period of 2001 through to 2007 the museum's collection of objects grew from 16,000 to 20,000.

The museum offers river and coastal cruises and lighthouse tours.

In the 1980s the museum resided in two sites, and a 20-minute ferry transported visitors between the two locations.

In 1987 a $7 million construction project to build a new home for the museum one mile from the museum's campus was in progress. The new location includes the Percy & Small Shipyard, preserving the nation's only surviving wooden shipbuilding site.Winton Scott Architects designed the current Maine Maritime Museum gallery building. In 1987, Elizabeth B. Noyce donated $3.5 million towards the construction on the museum's building. The building was completed in 1989 to a size of 30,000 square feet. In 2010 it was reported the museum underwent a renovation to address water issues arising out of a design flaw in the roof.


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