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Archive for chesapeake bay

The History of Chesapeake Bay

By Linda Tancs

Once the site of a busy complex of seafood packing houses, docks, and workboats, the 18-acre waterfront campus of Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum boasts 35 buildings, 10 of which house exhibitions that are open to the public. The only museum devoted to interpreting the entire maritime region of the bay, the facility traces the geological, social, and economic history of the Chesapeake Bay with the aid of a research library holding more than 10,000 volumes. Also, the museum’s collection of Chesapeake Bay watercraft is the largest in existence at 85 boats. Eleven of the collection’s largest vessels are on floating display at the museum’s docks.

On the Water’s Edge

By Linda Tancs

Havre de Grace, Maryland bills itself as unique on the Chesapeake.  Just five minutes off I-95 between Baltimore, Maryland and Wilmington, Delaware, the little city by the bay offers a plethora of things to do.  Why not take a stroll along the boardwalk, where the Susquehanna River meets the Chesapeake Bay.  Or check out the Chesapeake Bay Interpretive Buoy system, a system of buoys placed along portions of the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail, developed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.  The region is rich in maritime heritage.  Visit the lock house museum for the story of the Susquehanna and Tidewater Canal or take in a lecture at the maritime museum.  You can even visit a museum dedicated to decoy carving, or take an educational excursion aboard the Skipjack Martha Lewis, one of the last remaining working dredge boats comprising the Chesapeake Bay oyster fleet.