Hampton Roads Naval Museum

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The Hampton Roads Naval Museum is an official United States Navy museum that interprets the history of the Navy in the Virginia harbor of Hampton Roads. It is co-located with the Nauticus National Maritime Center in downtown Norfolk, Virginia.

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[edit] Collections

The museum’s permanent exhibits include material on the Battle of the Chesapeake (1781), the American Civil War in Hampton Roads, the Great White Fleet, World War II and the Cold War. Museum holdings are strong in the areas of naval prints, ship models and underwater archaeology. The Hampton Roads Naval Museum is the official repository of the remains of two Civil War shipwrecks: USS Cumberland and CSS Florida.

[edit] History

The museum opened in 1979 in the historic Pennsylvania House. This building, a replica of Independence Hall, is one of the state pavilions remaining from the 1907 Jamestown Exposition, a world's fair. A major effort during the museum’s tenure at Pennsylvania House was the 1984 installation of a large exhibit on the Civil War in Hampton Roads.

In the 1980's the city of Norfolk, Virginia invited the museum to relocate to a new downtown maritime center. The Navy accepted the offer, and in 1994 the Hampton Roads Naval Museum opened in the Nauticus National Maritime Center. With the move, the museum’s exhibits doubled in size.

In 2000 the museum undertook management of the battleship USS Wisconsin, which was berthed next to Nauticus that year and opened to the public on April 16, 2001.

[edit] Museum Programs and Resources

Special temporary exhibits in recent years have included "Animals and the US Navy", "Cuba Libre: The Spanish-American War in the Caribbean" and "Pax Americana: The US Navy in the Era of Violent Peace". The museum also offers guided tours, a lecture series, and educational programs. An active volunteer corps participates in all museum functions. A reference library, archive and photographic collection specializing in regional naval material are open to the public by appointment.

[edit] External links