Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum

Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum
Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum and USS Razorback in the Arkansas River
Established 2005
Location 120 Riverfront Park Drive
North Little Rock, Arkansas
Coordinates 34°45′09″N 92°16′00″W / 34.752592°N 92.2667°W / 34.752592; -92.2667 (Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum)Coordinates: 34°45′09″N 92°16′00″W / 34.752592°N 92.2667°W / 34.752592; -92.2667 (Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum)
Type Maritime museum
Website aimmuseum.org

The Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum is a maritime museum located at 120 Riverfront Park Drive, North Little Rock, Arkansas which opened on May 15, 2005. The museum includes artifacts from the nuclear-powered cruiser USS Arkansas, including the ship's bell and anchor, which are on public display.

The museum's primary exhibit is USS Razorback, a Balao-class submarine, which served during World War II (commissioned in 1944) and then served in the Korean, Vietnam and Cold Wars. The submarine was eventually transferred to the Turkish Navy (serving as TCG Muratreis until 2001) before returning to the US to become a museum ship. It is arguably the longest-serving submarine still existing in the world, and was commissioned by the United States and Turkey for 57 years of active duty (Taiwan has two World War II-era submarines that have been continuously in service since 1945 and 1946 first with the US Navy and then the Republic of China Navy, which are ROCS Hai Shih and ROCS Hai Pao). The museum provides tours of Razorback and even offers sleepovers on the submarine.[1]

Hoga, a US Navy tugboat, which survived and responded to the Attack on Pearl Harbor, was acquired by the museum on 28 November 2015.[2]

The museum has vessels that are bookends for the US in World War II, with Hoga from the beginning of the war at Pearl Harbor, alongside Razorback which was present in Tokyo Bay at the surrender of Japan.[3]

References

  1. Meyer, Diana Lambdin (June 28, 2009). "Sleep submerged in Little Rock Museum". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  2. "USS Hoga YT-146". Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  3. Case, Kerri Jackson (20 November 2015). "An historic Navy vessel to soon arrive in North Little Rock, will help 'bookend' World War II naval history". talkbusiness.net. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.