WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonians National Museum of American History opened On the Water: Stories from Maritime America, a new, permanent exhibition designed to engage the public in a dynamic exploration of Americas maritime heritage. The 8,500-square-foot exhibition builds on the Smithsonians unparalleled National Watercraft Collection of rigged ship models, patent models, documents and images to bring the sights, sounds and stories from the oceans, inland rivers and coastal communities to the museums millions of visitors.
During a special ceremony to commemorate National Maritime Day and open the exhibition to the public, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and retired Vice Adm. Albert J. Herberger joined Smithsonian Secretary Wayne Clough and Museum Director Brent D. Glass in honoring the sacrifices of Americas Merchant Mariners with a memorial wreath ceremony.
The maritime influence on American history is one of the most compelling chapters in the national story, said Glass. On the Water will transport visitors to places they have never been, allowing them to experience life at sea through the experiences of real people and objects from one of the Smithsonians oldest collections.
Using 360 artifacts and 390 images and graphics, On the Water explores life and work on the nations waterways, discovering the stories of fishermen, shipbuilders, merchant mariners, passengers and many others. From 18th-century sailing ships, 19th-century steamboats and fishing craft to todays mega containerships, the exhibition reveals Americas maritime connections through objects, documents, audiovisual programs and interactives. Visitors will discover the continuous and significant role maritime activity has played in American lives.
A companion exhibition to America on the Move, which explores how transportation has changed America, On the Water is made possible by the A.P. Møller and Chastine Mc-Kinney Møller Foundation.
Exhibition Highlights
On the Water is organized into seven sections and focuses primarily on maritime life in America from the 17th century to the present. The seven sections are arranged chronologically: Living in the Atlantic World, 1450-1800; Maritime Nation, 1800-1850; Fishing for a Living, 1840-1920; Inland Waterways, 1820-1940; Ocean Crossings, 1870-1969; Answering the Call, 1917-1945; and Modern Maritime America.
The exhibition incorporates the stories of real peoplesailors, immigrants, fishermen and many othersto allow visitors to explore American history through personal experiences. Objects, graphics and interactives transport visitors onto sailing ships, a Mississippi River towboat, ocean liners, an Alaskan fishing trawler, a U.S. Coast Guard buoy tender, cruise ships and tankers to give them to get a taste of life On the Water.
Among the highlighted objects on display are highly detailed, large ship models, including the tobacco ship Brilliant, which visitors encounter on entering the exhibition, and a cutaway of the modern factory trawler Alaska Ocean; a real whaleboat; a lifesaving car successfully used to rescue shipwreck survivors; artifacts on loan from the North Carolina Maritime Museum from Blackbeards ship, the Queen Annes Revenge, such as a cannonball and a small amount of gold dust; a large, slowly rotating ships propeller from the steamship Indiana; and the actual engine room from a 1920s buoy tender. Also included in the exhibition are costumes, coins, weapons, tools, consumer goods and marine specimens.
On the Water includes objects from across the nationthe inland waterways as well as the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and the Gulf Coastlinking maritime activity to larger stories in American history, such as the maritime component of the California gold rush.
Companion Web Site
The companion Web site to On the Water contains the same historical content as the physical exhibition. The site also features a searchable database that provides additional information and photographs for selected artifacts in the exhibition. Multimedia resources and educational activities, including an associated Flickr group where visitors can upload their own maritime-related imagery, round out the online experience. The site launches concurrently with the exhibition and is available at
http://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater.