San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park Museum

- Thursday, February 23, 2017

A Night at the Maritime Museum: Soirée 2013 - San Francisco Heritage
photo src: www.sfheritage.org

The San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park is located in San Francisco, California, United States. The park includes a fleet of historic vessels, a visitor center, a maritime museum, and a library/research facility. The park is sometimes referred to as the San Francisco Maritime Museum, its former 1951 name that changed in 1978 when the collections were acquired by the National Park Service. Today's San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park was authorized in 1988; the maritime museum is among the park's many cultural resources. The park also incorporates the Aquatic Park Historic District, bounded by Van Ness Avenue, Polk Street, and Hyde Street.


File:San Francisco Maritime Museum.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
photo src: commons.wikimedia.org


Maps, Directions, and Place Reviews



Historic vessel fleetEdit

The historic fleet of the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park is moored at the park's Hyde Street Pier. The fleet consists of the following major vessels:

  • Balclutha, an 1886 built square rigged sailing ship.
  • C.A. Thayer, an 1895 built schooner.
  • Eureka, an 1890 built steam ferryboat.
  • Alma, an 1891 built scow schooner.
  • Hercules, a 1907 built steam tug.
  • Eppleton Hall, a 1914 built paddlewheel tug.

The fleet also includes over one hundred small craft.


Sf Maritime Museum Video



Visitor CenterEdit

The Visitor Center is housed in the park's 1909 waterfront warehouse, located at the corner of Hyde and Jefferson Streets. The City of San Francisco declared the four-story brick structure an historic landmark in 1974, and the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. Inside, exhibits (including a first order Fresnel lighthouse lens and a shipwrecked boat) tell the story of San Francisco's colorful and diverse maritime heritage. The visitor center also contains a theater and a ranger-staffed information desk.


photo src: sf.funcheap.com


Maritime MuseumEdit

The maritime museum was until recently housed in a Streamline Moderne (late Art Deco) building that is the centerpiece of the Aquatic Park Historic District, a National Historic Landmark at the foot of Polk Street and a minute's walk from the visitor center and Hyde Street Pier. The building was originally built (starting in 1936) by the WPA as a public bathhouse, and its interior is decorated with fantastic and colorful murals, created primarily by artist and color theoretician Hilaire Hiler. The architects were William Mooser Jr. and William Mooser III.

The Steamship Room illustrates the technological evolution of maritime power from wind to steam, while the second-floor displays include three photomurals of the early San Francisco waterfront, lithographic stones, scrimshaw and whaling guns. The third-floor gallery is used for visiting exhibitions and in 2005 exhibited "Sparks", an exhibition of shipboard radio, radiotelephone, and radioteletype technology.

The Maritime Museum has re-opened after a series of renovations.


San Francisco Maritime Museum - Architectural Restoration - ARG
photo src: www.argsf.com


Maritime Research CenterEdit

The Maritime Research Center is the premier resource for San Francisco and Pacific Coast maritime history. Originating in 1939, the collections have become the largest maritime collection on the West Coast and the largest museum and research collection in the National Park Service.

The collections include more than:

  • 35,000 published titles comprising over 74,000 items
  • 500,000 photographs
  • 7,000 archival and manuscript collections
  • 150,000 naval architecture and marine engineering drawings
  • 3,000 maps and charts
  • 150,000 feet of motion picture film and video
  • 6,000 historical archaeology artifacts
  • 2,500 pieces of folk and fine art
  • 40,000 history objects
  • 100 small craft
  • 50,000 pieces of ephemera
  • 600 oral histories and audio recordings

Maritime Museum San Francisco Wedding
photo src: www.heritagemalta.org


Supporting associationsEdit

The park is supported by several cooperating associations. One of these is the San Francisco Maritime National Park Association.


Maritime Museum
photo src: www.triposo.com


Location and accessEdit

The Visitors Center, Hyde Street Pier and Maritime Museum are all situated adjacent to the foot of Hyde Street and at the western end of the Fisherman's Wharf district. The park headquarters and Maritime Research Center are located in Fort Mason, some 10 minutes walk to the west of the other sites. The Beach and Hyde Street terminal of the San Francisco cable car system adjoins the main site, while the Jones Street terminal of the F Market historic streetcar line is some 5 minutes walk to the east.

Opening times and fees for the various sites can be found on the park's website, see 'External links' below.

Open Water SwimmingEdit

Aquatic Park is a popular place for open water swimming, both for recreation and training. The South End Rowing Club and Dolphin Club are located in Aquatic Park.


Maritime Museum San Francisco Related Keywords & Suggestions ...
photo src: www.keyword-suggestions.com


See alsoEdit

  • 49-Mile Scenic Drive
  • List of maritime museums in the United States
  • List of museum ships

San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park - 千山万水
photo src: www.philipcaruso-story.com


ReferencesEdit


Maritime Museum San Francisco Related Keywords & Suggestions ...
photo src: www.keyword-suggestions.com


BibliographyEdit

Bill Pickelhaupt, "San Francisco's Aquatic Park," Charleston, SC, 2005, ISBN 0-7385-3084-0


San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park - 千山万水
photo src: www.philipcaruso-story.com


External linksEdit

  • NPS: official San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park website
  • NPS: Aquatic Park Historic District
  • San Francisco Dolphin Club -- bay swimming club based at Aquatic Park.
  • WPA murals and sculpture at Aquatic Park -- The New Deal Art Registry.

Source of the article : Wikipedia



EmoticonEmoticon

 

Start typing and press Enter to search