Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Connecticut River Museum

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Established
  
1975

Area
  
3,238 m²

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Added to NRHP
  
1 April 1982

Type
  
Maritime museum

Phone
  
+1 860-767-8269

Founded
  
1975

Connecticut River Museum

Location
  
Essex, Connecticut, USA

Address
  
67 Main St, Essex, CT 06426, USA

Hours
  
Closing soon · 10AM–5PMSaturday10AM–5PMSunday10AM–5PMMondayClosedTuesday10AM–5PMWednesday10AM–5PMThursday10AM–5PMFriday10AM–5PM

Similar
  
The Griswold Inn, Valley Railroad, Kidcity Children's Museum, Lutz Children's Museum, Connecticut Antique Machinery

Toy train display at the connecticut river museum essex ct


The Connecticut River Museum is a U.S. educational and cultural institution based at Steamboat Dock in Essex, Connecticut that focuses on the marine environment and maritime heritage of the Connecticut River Valley.

Contents

The three-story Connecticut River Museum is located in a restored 1878 steamboat warehouse, which is now the only one of its type remaining on the river, and has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The museum opened to the public in 1975, with Connecticut Governor Ella Grasso as its first paid member and ex officio patron. The core of its collection came from the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, which provided the museum with a loan of nautical artwork, navigation equipment and maritime-related artifacts.

The museum's main and third levels offer changing exhibits, while its second level is home to a permanent exhibition on shipbuilding, which includes historical maps and models of steamboats and exhibits on the piscine species in the Connecticut River.

The museum's collection also includes a full-scale replica of Turtle, the first American submarine, which was constructed in Essex in 1776 for use against the British in the American Revolution. The museum property also includes a boathouse and a research library. In December 1995, the museum was given a triangular 1-acre (4,000 m2) waterfront property, valued at US$910,000, in the neighboring village of Old Saybrook, Connecticut, by Bill and Victoria Winterer, who were among the museums co-founders. The property is used as a waterfront park managed by the museum. In 2011 the museum caught fire. They had to rebuild part of it.

Connecticut river museum


References

Connecticut River Museum Wikipedia