From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from
Museum ships)
- For ships that are not original see Ship replica. For preserved incomplete ships see Ships preserved in museums.
A museum ship, or sometimes memorial ship, is a ship that has been preserved and converted into a museum open to the public, for educational as well as memorial purposes. Some are also used for training and recruitment purposes, a use found mostly with the small number of museum ships that are still operational, i.e. capable of regular movement.[1][2] There are several hundred museum ships around the world,[citation needed] often associated with maritime museums.
Former crewmembers of
USS Missouri pose for photos after the Anniversary of the End of World War II ceremony.
Despite the long history of sea travel, the ravages of the elements and the expense of maintenance has resulted in the destruction of nearly all the ships that were ever built, often by sinking, usually by being broken up and sold for scrap. Only a few have survived, sometimes because of historical significance, but more often simply due to luck and circumstance.
Since an old ship tied up at dockside, without attention, will still decay and eventually sink, the practice of recent years has been to form some sort of preservation society, solicit donations from governments and the wealthy, organize volunteer labor from the enthusiasts, and open the restored ship to visitors, usually for a fee.
The restoration and continual maintenance of museum ships presents an interesting set of problems for historians who are frequently asked for advice, and the results periodically generate some controversy. For instance, the rigging of sailing ships has almost never survived, and so the rigging plan must be reconstructed from various sources. Studying the ships also allows historians to analyse how life on and operation of the ships took place. [3] Numerous scientific papers have been written on ship restoration and maintenance, and international conferences are held discussing the latest developments.[4]
Another discussion in the preservation community is the distinction between a 'real' museum ship, and a ship replica. As repairs accumulate over time, less and less of the ship is of the original materials, and the lack of old parts (or even 'appropriate' work tools) may lead to the use of modern 'short-cuts' (such as welding a metal plate instead of riveting it, as would be the case during the ships historical period).[5] Visitors without historical background are also often unable to distinguish between a historical museum ship and a more-or-less historically relevant ship replica, which may serve solely as a tourist attraction.[3]
Typically the visitor enters via gangplank, wanders around on the deck, then goes below, usually using the original stairways, giving a sense of how the crew got around. The interior features restored but inactivated equipment, enhanced with mementos including old photographs, explanatory displays, pages from the ship's logs, menus, and the like. Some will add recorded sound effects, audio tours or video displays to add to the experience.
A number of the larger museum ships have begun to offer hosting for weddings, meetings, and other events, sleepovers, and on a few ships still seaworthy, cruises. In this category is the Constitution's annual "turnaround", where the old ship is towed out into the harbor and brought back in facing the other way, so as to weather evenly. A place on the deck is by invitation or lottery only, and highly prized.
The tourism appeal of a city waterfront graced by an interesting old vessel is such that most port cities of the world now have at least one museum ship, even if it has meant building a replica ship at great expense.[citation needed]
The first museum ship could be considered to be Jason's Argo, which after his expedition for the Golden Fleece, was preserved on a beach and shown to visitors for ages afterwards.
-
| Name |
Location |
Affiliated with |
Comments |
| HNLMS Abraham Crijnssen |
Den Helder, Netherlands |
Netherlands
 |
Minesweeper, escaped disguised as a tropical island from Surabaya, Java in 1942, and made it to Australia |
| USS Alabama |
Mobile, Alabama |
United States
 |
Battleship, received nine WWII battle stars, later joined by USS Drum (SS-228) |
| Aurora |
St. Petersburg, Russia |
Russia
 |
Protected cruiser, launched in 1900, survived the Battle of Tsushima and fired the first shots of the October Revolution |
| Balclutha |
San Francisco, California |
United States
 |
Tall ship, launched in 1886, U.S. National Historic Landmark |
| HMS Belfast |
London, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Light cruiser of World War II |
| ORP Błyskawica |
Gdynia, Poland |
Poland
 |
Destroyer of World War II, oldest preserved one (launched 1936) |
| USS Bowfin |
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii |
United States
 |
Submarine, fought in the Pacific Theater of World War II |
| HMY Britannia |
Edinburgh, Scotland |
United Kingdom
 |
Royal Yacht / Hospital ship (designed for potential conversion), last such ship of the United Kingdom |
| HMS Cavalier |
Chatham, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Destroyer, last remaining British World War II destroyer |
| USS Cod |
Cleveland, Ohio |
United States
 |
Submarine, fought in the Pacific Theater of World War II |
| USS Constitution |
Boston, Massachusetts |
United States
 |
Frigate, oldest commissioned warship afloat |
| Cutty Sark |
Greenwich, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Clipper, only such ship surviving, recently (2007) sustained heavy damage in a fire |
| Drazki |
Varna, Bulgaria |
Bulgaria
 |
Torpedo boat, launched in 1907 |
| Elissa |
Galveston, Texas |
United States
 |
Tall ship, one of the oldest still active, launched in 1877, U.S. National Historic Landmark |
| Gorch Fock |
Stralsund, Germany |
Germany, Soviet Union
,  |
Barque, school ship scuttled at the end of World War II, raised and re-used as school ship by the Soviet Union |
| SS Great Britain |
Bristol, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Ocean liner, a Brunel design, first ocean-going ship to have screw propellor and iron hull |
| HMCS Haida |
Hamilton, Ontario |
Canada
 |
Destroyer, Tribal class, one of the most successful ships of World War II |
| Hiddensee |
Fall River, Massachusetts |
East Germany
 |
Corvette, missile, only Tarantul I class (Russia) on public display in the world |
| Huáscar |
Talcahuano, Chile |
Peru, Chile
, |
Monitor launched in 1865, one of first ironclads, took significant part in the War of the Pacific |
| USS Intrepid |
New York City, New York, USA |
United States
 |
World War II Essex-class aircraft carrier, launched on April 26, 1943, and now part of the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum |
| USS Lexington |
Corpus Christi, Texas, USA |
United States
 |
Aircraft carrier, served in WWII and subsequently used in the training of US Navy aircrews for three decades |
| USS Midway |
San Diego |
United States
 |
Aircraft carrier, largest such museum ship |
| Mikasa |
Yokosuka, Japan |
Japan
 |
Pre-dreadnought battleship, Admiral Togo's flagship at the Battle of Tsushima, only preserved example of the ship type |
| USS Missouri |
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii |
United States
 |
Battleship, site of the Japanese surrender ceremony in World War II |
| USS Nautilus |
Groton, Connecticut |
United States
 |
Nuclear-powered submarine, first such ship |
| USS New Jersey |
Camden, New Jersey |
United States
 |
Battleship, one of the longest-serving of the 20th Century |
| USS North Carolina |
Wilmington, North Carolina |
United States
 |
Battleship, served in every campaign of the Pacific Theater, World War II |
| USS Olympia |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
United States
 |
Protected cruiser, flagship during the Battle of Manila Bay, Spanish-American War |
| Passat |
Travemünde, Germany |
Germany
 |
Barque, four-masted, flying P-Liner, sister ship of Pamir |
| Peking |
South Street Seaport, New York |
United States
 |
Barque, four-masted, flying P-Liner |
| Pommern |
Mariehamn, Åland |
Finland
 |
Barque, four-masted, flying P-Liner |
| RMS Queen Mary |
Long Beach |
United Kingdom
 |
Ocean Liner, now museum ship and hotel |
| HNoMS Rap |
Horten, Norway |
Norway
 |
Torpedo boat, first of such type |
| HMCS Sackville |
Halifax |
Canada
 |
Corvette, escort; last remaining such WWII ship |
| USS Salem |
Quincy, Massachusetts |
United States
 |
Heavy cruiser, only example of a heavy cruiser class of naval warship still in existence |
| USS Slater |
Albany, New York |
United States
 |
Destroyer escort, only World War II memorial/museum ship of this type still afloat |
| HMS Småland |
Gothenburg, Sweden |
Sweden
 |
Destroyer, launched in 1956, decommissioned in 1979 |
| Star of India |
San Diego |
United Kingdom, United States
, |
Tall ship, one of the oldest still active, launched in 1863, U.S. National Historic Landmark |
| USCGC Taney |
Baltimore |
United States
 |
Cutter, coast guard, last U.S. ship still afloat that was present at Pearl Harbor attack |
| USS Texas |
La Porte, Texas |
United States
 |
Battleship (Dreadnought), oldest surviving of such type, one of only two ships remaining to have served in both World Wars |
| U-505 |
Chicago |
Nazi Germany
 |
Submarine, Type XIC. German WWII veteran captured by the United States Navy in 1944 |
| U-995 |
Laboe |
Nazi Germany, Norway
, |
Submarine, only remaining Type VIIC/41. German WWII veteran and post-war Norwegian KNM Kaura |
| Vasa |
Stockholm |
Sweden
 |
A late galleon, and the world's only almost fully preserved 17th century warship |
| HMS Victory |
Portsmouth, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Ship of the line, technically still flagship of the Royal Navy (though permanently in drydock) and the oldest ship in commission in any navy |
| HMS Warrior |
Portsmouth, England |
United Kingdom
 |
Battleship, first ocean-going iron hulled ship of its type, launched in 1860 |
| USS Wisconsin |
Norfolk, Virginia, on loan |
United States
 |
Battleship, served in various conflicts since World War II |
| USS Yorktown |
Charleston, South Carolina |
United States
 |
Aircraft carrier, oldest such ship still intact, launched in 1943 |
- ^ Activities of the Historic Naval Ships Association (the international Historic Naval Ships Association website)
- ^ The World's Third Largest Fleet (the international Historic Naval Ships Association website)
- ^ a b Museum ships built in 1999: Remarks on the reconstruction of historical inland and sea-going vessels (abstract) - Ingo Heidbrink, Ingo; Deutsches Schiffahrtsarchiv (DSA) 22, 1999, Page 43-58
- ^ Conference Proceedings (from the 'Third International Conference on the Technical Aspects of the Preservation of Historic Vessels' (1997) webpage on the San Francisco Maritime Park Association website)
- ^ Conserving Unique and Historic Ships - Kearon, John; Head of Shipkeeping, Industrial and Land Transport Conservation, Merseyside Maritime Museum, paper from the 'Third International Conference on the Technical Aspects of the Preservation of Historic Vessels' (1997) webpage on the San Francisco Maritime Park Association website