The Chesapeake Log, Spring 2012

Page 1

EDUCATION

RESEARCH

LIFELINES

Volunteer Profile: Model Guild

By Katie Willis

CALENDAR

Frederick Douglass Day, Maritime Model Expo, Elf Classic Yacht Race, Sailing Program, Kids Club, Boater Safety Classes, Member Nights, and more.

Don’t forget to take advantage of member benefits!

Renew your membership using the enclosed envelope and receive an additional three months of membership free!

MEMBERS ENjOY:

• Free general admission

• Free or reduced admission to special events and programs

• Docking privileges

• VIP hospitality at special events

• Museum store discounts

• Monthly Member Nights

• Discounts on local lodging, dining, and shopping

• Subscription to The Chesapeake Log (some benefits are enhanced at higher membership levels)

Visit cbmm.org/join.htm for more information about membership levels, or contact the membership department at 410-745-4991.

Campus improvements

CURATOR’S CORNER

FEATURES

ON THE RAIL

An update on the Rosie Parks restoration project and repairs to other historic vessels in the Museum’s fleet.

Marie Thomas

Marie Thomas

ANNUAL FUND HONOR ROLL

Mission Statement

The mission of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is to inspire an understanding of and appreciation for the rich maritime heritage of the Chesapeake Bay and its tidal reaches, together with the artifacts, cultures and connections between this place and its people.

Vision Statement

The vision of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is to be the premier maritime museum for studying, exhibiting, preserving and celebrating the important history and culture of the largest estuary in the United States, the Chesapeake Bay.

Sign up for our e-Newsletter and stay up-to-date on all of the news and events at the Museum. Email havefun@cbmm.org to be added to our mailing list.

Keep up-to-date on Facebook. facebook.com/mymaritimemuseum

Follow the Museum’s progress on historic Chesapeake boat restoration projects and updates on the Apprentice For a Day Program. Chesapeakeboats.blogspot.com

A general education forum and valuable resource of stories, links, and information for the curious of minds. Beautifulswimmers.tumblr.com

Watch our Rosie Parks skipjack restoration updates and more at youtube.com/CBMMorg1965

The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum

Navy Point, PO Box 636 St. Michaels, MD 21663

410-745-2916, cbmm.org

On the cover:

Workers from Hi-Tide Marine Construction of Snow Hill, MD continue bulkhead restoration work along Navy Point this past january.

Thanks to Crystal Trust, the State of Maryland, and a matching grant from the Department of Natural Resources, the Museum has secured all necessary funding for the bulkhead project on Navy Point. Hi-Tide Marine Construction, Inc. of Snow Hill, MD, broke ground in November, 2011 and the work is scheduled to be finished this spring, replacing 681 feet of decayed wooden bulkhead with more durable vinyl sheathing, adding one finger pier and three spring pilings, and upgrading marina electric and water service.

In addition to the bulkhead, a small wall in the Welcome Center has been removed to improve traffic flow and visual appearances, a new merchandise display window is now revealed in the Museum Store, and all of the lights in the Waterfowling building have been replaced with brighter, energy-saving LED lighting.

Looking up the mast of the skipjack Rebecca T. Ruark, in Tilghman Island.

Photo: Tracey Munson

Editors: Tracey Munson & Marie Thomas

Creative Director: Marie Thomas

Copy Editor: Mariana Lesher

Contributing Writers: Dick Cooper, Pete Lesher, Kate Livie, Kelley Allen, Michelle Zacks, Katie Willis, Esty Collet, Robert Forloney, Tracey Munson, Marie Thomas

The Chesapeake Log is a publication of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

contents
2012 1 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 2 A MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT & CHAIRMAN
CURRENTS Dan Sutherland remembered, visiting vessels, children’s Chesapeake Bay artwork contest, member benefits, new
Spring
exhibits, and more.
Push and Pull of Chesapeake Tugboating Photos & Story by Michelle Zacks NEW EXHIBIT: Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Bay Tugboats
Lesher 3 5 9 11 12 13
The
By Pete
Step out this spring with the Academy for Lifelong Learning
What’s Fresh? Seasonal Selections from Education
A Revitalized Center for Chesapeake Studies
By Robert Forloney
The Real Rosie Parks
Museum Interns: Where
By Dick Cooper
are they now? By
18 19 23 24
9 13
23

Museum Staff

President

Langley R. Shook President, 4951

Cheryl Miller, Administrative Assistant, 4943

Breene M. Kerr Center for Chesapeake Studies

Pete Lesher, Chief Curator, 4971

Richard Scofield Assistant Curator of Watercraft, 4966

Rob Forloney, Director of the Kerr Center, 4959

Kate Livie, Director of Education, 4947

Eric Applegarth Exhibits Specialist, 4945

Lynne Phillips Collections Manager, 4972

Helen Van Fleet, Education & Reservations Assistant, 4941

Michelle Zacks, Museum Folklorist, 4961

Boatyard

Marc Barto Rosie Parks Project Manager, 4967

Mike Gorman, Vessel Maintenance Manager, 4967

Don MacLeod Vessel Maintenance Assistant, 4967

India Gilham-Westerman, Shipwright Apprentice

Jennifer Kuhn Shipwright Apprentice

Ken Philips, Shipwright Apprentice

Chris Sanders, Journeyman Shipwright

Communications & Special Events

Tracey Munson Vice President of Communications, 4960

Marie Thomas, Communications Manager, 4953

Melissa Spielman Director of Events & Volunteer Program, 4956

Ida Heelan, Events Coordinator, 4944

Constituent Services

René Stevenson, Director of Development, 4950

Debbie Collison, Membership Manger, 4991

Katie Willis, Visitor Services Manager, 4993

Emilie Knud-Hansen Mem/Develop. Assistant, 4955

Marty Smythe, Museum Store Manager, 4963

Victoria Alexander, Museum Store Associate, 4962

Megan Fisher, Museum Host, 4945

Anne Robling Museum Host, 4945

Maggie Robar, Museum Store Associate, 4962

Finance

Jean Brooks, Vice President of Finance, 4958

Brenda Faulkner Director of Human Resources, 4948

Digie McGuirk Accounting/HR Assistant, 4957

Operations

Bill Gilmore, Vice President of Operations, 4949

John Ford Facilities Manager, 4970

Lad Mills, Boat Donations Program Manager, 4942

Donna Fairbank, Facilities Custodian, 4969

Sam Fairbank, Facilities Maintenance Assistant, 4969

Joseph Redman Facilities Maintenance Assistant, 4969

To contact, dial 410-745, and the number listed.

To email, use the first initial, full last name @cbmm.org.

A Message from the President & Chairman

You might assume the Museum slows down during the winter, but that couldn’t be farther from the truth. Your Museum continues to be a hub of activity, during even the coldest season. This January saw a 300% increase in attendance from last year, and while the unnaturally warm weather certainly helped, we know the Museum’s rich programs and educational opportunities—made possible through your generous support—played a big role, too.

A sold-out lecture series and record attendance in the ChesAdventures and Academy for Lifelong Learning programs had campus teeming with members and new visitors alike.

Our new “Delmarva Days” initiative offered free admission on select weekends and holidays, and continues to be a great way to invite neighbors to see what makes this place so special. New visitors aren’t the only ones noticing how special our Museum is—since the fall, we’ve welcomed wide media attention to campus. The History Channel’s “101 Best Inventions” featured a segment on the keel with Chief Curator Pete Lesher, and the Discovery Channel filmed a segment for its show “House Hunters.”

More recently, WBOC’s “Delmarva Life” show hosts interviewed Lesher about our winter programs and the skipjack Rosie Parks restoration project. Lesher was also heard on NPR’s Radio Catskill WJFF speaking about the tug Delaware.

Speaking of boats, be sure to turn to page 23 and check out the progress on the restoration of Rosie Parks, and the repairs made to both the tug Delaware and the Museum’s Potomac River Dory. As our busy season approaches, we

Board of Governors 2011-2012

CG Appleby, Chair

Alan R. Griffith, Vice Chair

hope to welcome even more visitors and members to campus. After a successful first event in the fall of 2010, Frederick Douglass Day returns May 5, along with the Maritime Model Expo and the Elf Classic Yacht Race on May 19, followed by the Antique and Classic Boat Festival, celebrating its silver anniversary, on Father’s Day weekend.

Warmer weather also welcomes the return of our popular education programs including Lighthouse Overnight Adventures, the Summer Sailing program, and the half-day Kids Club summer camps, all of which fill up fast. (See our calendar on page 19 for a complete list of all upcoming events and programs.)

The bulkhead project on Navy Point is nearing completion with 681 feet to be replaced, a new finger pier and spring pilings, and upgraded marina electric and water services. All of these events, improvements, and programs are possible because of your generosity. Your donations and membership enable the Museum to fulfill its mission of sharing the stories of the Chesapeake Bay and the people who have shaped their lives around it.

Our fiscal year ends April 30 and we are close to meeting our fundraising goal. If you have not already done so, please consider donating to this year’s Annual Fund, or making a second gift. As you can see, we promise your gifts will be put to good use.

And don’t forget to encourage your friends and neighbors to enjoy all the benefits of membership including our upcoming Member Nights, our way of saying “thank you” for your unwavering support and encouragement.

Please come visit your Museum soon and enjoy all you’ve helped to make possible.

Joseph E. Peters, Vice Chair

Tom D. Seip, Treasurer

Mark S. Nestlehutt, Secretary Paul Berry

Richard J. Bodorff

Harry W. Burton

Frederic N. Cross

William S. Dudley

David E. Dunn

Jocelyn W. Eysymontt

Anna W. Fichtner

Howard S. Freedlander

Dagmar D. P. Gipe

James P. Harris

E. Brooke Harwood, Jr. Christopher A. Havener

Francis Hopkinson

Pamela Jana

R. Douglas Jurrius

Richard H. Kimberly

Peter M. Kreindler

William C. Millar

Geoffrey F. Oxnam

Bruce A. Ragsdale

Henry H. Stansbury

Benjamin C. Tilghman, Jr. Richard C. Tilghman, Jr. Alfred Tyler II Barbara Viniar

Langley R. Shook, President Emeriti Richard T. Allen Margaret D. Keller

Breene M. Kerr

Charles L. Lea, Jr. D. Ted Lewers

Fred C. Meendsen

John C. North II

Sumner Parker

Robert A. Perkins

As this issue of the Log went to press, we learned of the loss of Daniel Sutherland, our dear friend and much admired boatyard program manager, who passed away on February 18. Those who had the privilege of knowing or working with Danny, or learning small boatbuilding from him, will always remember Danny as an enormously talented craftsman, a patient teacher who generously shared and demonstrated his skills with old and young alike, and, fundamentally, just a great guy who was fun to be around and who never took himself too seriously. Please see the story about Dan on page 5. Our heartfelt condolences go out to Dan’s family, his two children, Storm and Skye, and his long-time companion, Patti Diamond.

James K. Peterson

Norman H. Plummer

John J. Roberts

Henry H. Spire

James E. Thomas

Joan Darby West

Donald G. Whitcomb

3 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 4
President Langley R. Shook Chairman CG Appleby

Co-workers laud boat builder’s skill

Amaster boat builder died Saturday, February 18, but the legacy of his craftsmanship remains. Daniel Sutherland, boatyard program manager at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, for almost five years, died of apparent heart failure at the age of 47.

“He will be sorely missed,” said Richard Scofield, assistant curator for watercraft and former boatyard manager. “His talent is not replaceable.”

A fourth-generation boat builder from upstate New York, Sutherland learned much of his craft from his grandfather, Ernest Sutherland, said Scofield, who worked closely with Sutherland and had known him for about 20 years. “Danny was extremely intelligent, and a really good boat builder,” Scofield said. “I was thrilled to death every day to have him working in my boat shop.”

Pete Lesher, chief curator, said it brought the Museum great pride to bring in someone of Sutherland’s caliber. “Often the boats that he built were so finely finished that you didn’t want to paint these things,” Lesher said. “So many of them ended up being varnished. You didn’t need paint to cover up the putty that most everybody else uses.” Lesher said the Museum hired Sutherland specifically to teach boatbuilding, which he did through the Museum’s apprentice program.

“So often, people who have these exact ing standards don’t have the patience to teach those who are just learning,” he said. “But he [Dan] had that.”

Every weekend, the boat yard bustled with activity as some people partici pated in the apprentice program, while others watched. “He really was an extraordinary man,” Lesher said. Prior to joining the Museum, those in certain boating circles knew Sutherland for his work, and through the annual Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival.

“St. Michaels for one weekend is a mecca for people who build, own, sail, cruise...,” Lesher said. “Dan was a long-time participant there. It was sort of a home crowd for him ... When he exhibited a boat here, these were the sorts of boats that would win prizes.”

Sutherland’s work included building more than 50 boats from John Henry Rushton’s designs. Scofield said he considered Sutherland perhaps the world’s greatest expert on the boats of Rushton, a premier canoe builder in New York in the 1800s.

And Lesher praised Sutherland’s skills building lapstrake small boats. “I have a Lapstrake 12-foot cedar canoe, and when it needed restoration I took it to him,” Lesher said. “Nobody I knew knew better how to repair one of these boats than Dan.”

Lesher also had the opportunity to sail a boat Sutherland built in New York, where Sutherland built boats for museums. “It’s like sailing a piano,” Lesher said.

“The degree of craftsmanship and finish is truly extraordinary.”

Before coming to Talbot County, Sutherland did work for the Antique Boat Museum in Clayton, NY, the Adirondack Museum in Blue Mountain, NY, and the Alexandria Seaport Foundation in Alexandria, VA.

He also owned Sutherland Boat and Coach in Hammondsport, NY.

A memorial service and celebration of Dan’s life was held at the Museum on Saturday, March 10. In lieu of flowers, the family has asked that donations in memory of Daniel Sutherland be made to the Museum, where they will be placed in a Boatbuilding Apprentice Endowment Fund. Donations may be sent to PO Box 636, St. Michaels, MD 21663 with a notation that the donation is being made in memory of Dan Sutherland.

Visiting Vessels: Schooner Sultana, Viking Ship Norseman, & HMS Bounty

On Sunday, May 5, the Museum welcomes back the Schooner Sultana for a week-long visit. The Sultana will be open for boarding to all Museum visitors from 2:30-4:30pm on Tuesday, May 8.

The schooner Sultana serves as an on-the-water classroom for learning about the history and environment of the Chesapeake Bay. An almost exact replica of a British schooner that patrolled the North American coast just prior to the American Revolution, Sultana provides day-long programs for up to 32 participants as well as liveaboard programs for up to nine guests.

For more information about the Sultana, visit schoonersultana.com.

The replica ship HMS Bounty will be docked along the Museum’s harborside from Thursday, June 14, to Monday, June 18, during the Antique and Classic Boat Festival. The tall ship is offering dockside tours to Museum visitors at $10 for adults, $5 for children, and free for children five and under.

The original tall ship is known for the infamous mutiny that took place in Tahiti in 1789. The current replica ship was built in 1962 for the movie “Mutiny on the Bounty,” starring Marlon Brando, and was more recently featured in “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest,” starring Johnny Depp.

Besides movie appearances, the HMS Bounty sails the country offering dockside tours and is used to teach a variety of programs, including sail training and

educational programs for school children.

For more information about the HMS Bounty, visit tallshipbounty.org.

On Friday, June 22, the Viking ship Norseman is landing at the Museum for a three-day visit, offering a reallife look at a Viking ship and the type of people who sailed them more than 1,000 years ago. Norseman is a 40 foot half-scale replica of the famous Gokstad ship that represents one of the many types of sailing vessels built and designed by Vikings.

The Norseman’s crew will be in authentic Viking attire and will establish a small encampment, complete with iron and woodworking tools, and period music. The ship is sailing under the banner of the Leif Ericson Society International, a non-profit organiza tion dedicated to promoting truth and understanding of the Viking

explorer—the first European to set foot upon North America.

The ship is based in Wilmington, DE, at the Kalmar Nyckel Shipyard, and will be trailered to the Museum campus. While Maryland is not known for a large Scandinavian-American popula tion, Delaware and New Jersey were the primary destinations for thousands of 19th-century emigrants from Sweden and Norway. Just one look at the boats on display at the museum will offer convincing proof that many Viking boat designs hold up even today.

The Viking visit is made possible by a generous gift from Merrilyn & John I. F. Knud-Hansen, MD. For more information about the Norseman or the Leif Ericson Society, visit vikingship.org.

5 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 6 currents
A photo from 2011 of Dan Sutherland and a few of his co-workers at the transom of the skipjack Rosie Parks. From left: Richard Scofield, Dan Sutherland, Don MacLeod, and Marc Barto. David Harp, chesapeakephotos.com From left, the Schooner Sultana Viking ship Norseman, and the replica HMS Bounty.

NEW EXHIBIT: Opens April 14 Gunning Among Friends: Chesapeake Waterfowl Hunting Clubs

Banding together for a day’s hunt ing is a longtime practice among those hunting waterfowl for sport. And when the duck blind is too far from home, remote clubhouses near the marshy shorelines have provided a home away from home. Whether populated by wealthy hunters from another state or working class friends from closer by, waterfowling clubs have formed along the Chesapeake Bay from the Susquehanna Flats in the north to the saltwater marshes along the lower Eastern Shore since the early nineteenth century.

An exhibit on these clubs, featuring historic photos, documents, decoys, and other gunning accoutrements, opens in the Museum’s Waterfowling Building on April 14 with an open ing reception on Friday, April 13.

The exhibit remains open through November 4, 2012, during regular Museum hours. For more information, see page 20.

Children’s Chesapeake Bay artwork on display

PNC Bank’s “Grow Up Great” Program awards grant to Museum

Free Daily Events

Memorial Day through Labor Day (with paid admission, free for members)

PUBLIC

TOURS

What: 45-minute highlights tour.

When: Friday & Saturday Time: 11am & 2pm

WATERMAN’S WHARF

What: Docent interpretation.

When: Everyday Time: 11am-3pm

CHESAPEAKE PEOPLE

What: Visit with authentic Chesapeake People who share their stories.

Student artwork is now on display in the Van Lennep Auditorium. The show represents 50 young artists from across the Mid-Atlantic who have qualified as semi-finalists in a “Chesapeake Bay Revival Coloring Contest.”

To enter the contest, students were encouraged to create an original piece of artwork capturing their own interpretation of the Chesapeake Bay. The winning poster will be selected in March 2012 with input from contest sponsors, including the Museum. Check our Facebook page for the announcement of the winners.

journeyman shipwright Chris Sanders welcomed back

Chris Sanders, of Newport, RI, rejoins the Museum as a journeyman shipwright. Sanders’ work begins on the three-year restoration project of the historic skipjack, Rosie Parks. Sanders previously served as a Museum apprentice from 2008 to 2009, when he worked alongside Boatyard Program Manager Dan Sutherland to build Vida, a 9-1/2’ tender for the 1888 classic racing yacht, Elf Sanders also worked on the bugeye Edna E. Lockwood and assisted in the day-to-day preservation of the Museum’s historic fleet of Chesapeake vessels. After leaving the Museum in 2009, Sanders enrolled in the International Yacht Restoration School in Newport, RI, receiving his proficiency in yacht restoration degree in June, 2011. He also holds a degree in physics from the University of North Carolina. Prior to rejoining the Museum, Sanders worked restoring mahogany runabouts in Bristol, CT. He currently resides in St. Michaels, MD.

The Museum has been awarded a grant from PNC Bank’s “Grow Up Great” program, which allows the Museum’s popular Kids Club program to be extended for two extra weeks. Collaborating with the St. Michaels Community Center (SMCC), the Museum will use the additional two weeks to provide programming for underserved youth in the Bay Hundred area.

Kids Club is a half-day, hands-on Chesapeakefocused camp for kids ages four to seven, in which children learn about the Chesapeake Bay firsthand through activities, stories, games, and crafts.

“One of the main priorities of the PNC Foundation is to provide educational and developmental opportunities that improve the school readiness of underserved children,” explains Kimberly Kastel, vice president and bank manager of St. Michaels’ PNC Bank, “and our volunteers are really look ing forward to helping out with the camp this summer,” she adds.

For more information about Kids Club, contact Director of Education Kate Livie at 410-745-4947 or email klivie@cbmm.org.

When: Saturdays Time: 11am-3pm

FAMILY DROP-INS

What: Kid themed, hands-on activities (crafts or tours).

When: Thursdays & Fridays Time: 2-4pm

BOATYARD SKILLS DEMONSTRATION

What: Learn a traditional boatyard skill from a trained shipwright.

When: Monday - Friday Time: 1:30pm

COMMUNITY WORK DAYS: SKIPJACK RESTORATION

What: Work under the guidance of a master shipwright to help rebuild the skipjack Rosie Parks .

When: Saturdays Time: 10am-3pm

SAILING SATURDAYS

What: Try your hand at sailing our Apprentice For a Day boats. Boats range in size from 12 to 20 feet. The boats are perfect for one to two people, with instructions provided for beginners. Space is limited and pre- registration is recommended. Call the Welcome Center at 410-745-4965 to reserve, otherwise, it’s first-come, first-served.

When: June 9, July 14, August 11 & September 15 with two daily sailing sessions from 10am-12noon, and 1-4pm

Cost: $10 per session

MISTER JIM CRUISES

What: Climb aboard the buyboat Mister Jim for a scenic cruise on the Miles River.

When: Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, Mondays

Time: 12noon, 1pm, 2pm & 3pm

Cost: $10

7 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 8 currents
Gunning clubs like the Accomack Club in Virginia provided comfortable accommodations to members and guests. Museum collection, gift of Dr. Harry Walsh Vice President & Branch Manager of the St. Michaels branch of PNC Bank Kimberly Kastel, Museum Director of Education Kate Livie, SMCC Director Trish Payne, and SMCC Youth Coordinator Pam Phillips stop for a photo while taking a tour of campus to discuss plans for the upcoming sessions of Kids Club.

Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Bay Tugboats

The Push and Pull of Chesapeake Tugboating

Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Bay Tugboats opens in the Museum’s Steamboat Building on April 21, 2012.

The Chesapeake is a highway for tugs and barges, and for the large ships aided by tugs in port. Centered around the big compound steam engine that dominates the room—an engine salvaged from the 1929 C&O railroad tug W. J. Harahan (ex-Chessie, ex-El Toro)—the exhibit will explore the variety of ways tugs are used around the Chesapeake.

Visitors will gain historical perspective on what has changed in the world of tugboats on the Bay since their first arrival, and meet some of the captains and crews who work—and sometimes live—aboard these hard-working boats.

To gather the stories of these men and women, Museum Folklorist Michelle Zacks went aboard tugs, photographed their work and collected photographs from some of the crews, and conducted a series of oral history interviews all around the Bay. This article will give you a flavor for some of the stories highlighted in the exhibit.

On a recent mild December afternoon at the docks of McAllister

Towing in Baltimore’s North Locust Point Marine Terminal, Captain Robert Dempsey announces the Robert E. McAllister is heading out in an hour. Moran Towing, another of Baltimore’s three ship docking companies (Krause Marine Towing is the third), has just called in for an assist. The Surrie Moran is docking a container ship so large—more than three football fields in length and nearly one football field wide—that three tugs are needed to nudge her into Baltimore’s Seagirt Marine Terminal. The Robert E. McAllister’s 4000 horsepower twin diesel engines would come in handy.

From the bow of this converted Navy yard tug, it’s clear the people and work animating this harbor tell the Chesapeake Bay’s story just as much as skipjacks, crab pickers, and oyster tongers. Since Colonial times, Baltimore harbor has been the hub of Chesapeake maritime life. Shipbuilding, ship repair, and ship docking provided a backbone for port life and its diverse mix of people. Everything from tobacco to wheat, sugar to guano, oysters to watermelons, and coal to petroleum has moved in and out of this industrial harbor.

Captain Bob directs the Robert E. McAllister out toward the Francis Scott Key Bridge, moving at a slow and steady eight knots. Fort McHenry lies to starboard while the cranes of Seagirt Marine Terminal loom ahead to port, as the Robert E. passes cruise ships, a Domino sugar ship, and enormous military vessels. Sometimes, Captain Bob sees watermen gill netting for rockfish next to the channel. Gulls careen past and Canada geese stitch Vs across the sky. As the MSC (Mediterranean Shipping Company) Rachele heaves into view with containers stacked sixhigh, a tiny launch zips out to meet her, letting the harbor pilot climb aboard to confer with the bay pilot. Once inside the Key Bridge, the bay pilot disembarks onto the waiting launch, while the harbor pilot begins to direct the docking Moran and McAllister tugs.

Lying snugly parallel against the port bow of this skyscraper of a ship— “on the shoulder” as they say in the business—the Robert E. is posi tioned to connect the two vessels. Steve Marks, the other man on the McAllister tug’s two-man crew, marries the Rachele’s messenger line to the Robert E.’s, allowing the ship line to be pulled up. McAllister calls Steve’s position “deck utility,” meaning he is both the engineer and

line handler. As the Robert E. swings around to nose her bow into the flank of the Rachele, pushing the container ship towards Seagirt, the movement is as gentle as the rocking of a cradle.

It’s no surprise that many a Chesapeake tributary leads to tug and barge work. A marine biologist by training, Captain Bob’s lifelong love of the water exemplifies a connecting thread in the tugboat world. While Bob Dempsey was “pulled” toward tugboats, for others this line of work comes as a “push.”

Affectionately known as “Tangerines” in the industry, 50 to 60 men from Virginia’s Tangier Island are employed on tugs and barges. Kim Parks, better known as “Socks,” is one. Most of the men in his family were water men and, following in their footsteps, Parks began waterman life at age six by steering his uncle’s boat toward the

next crab pot. By 15, his father entrusted him with his own boat for winter time crab dredging. Discouraged by what he sees as harsh regulations making it nearly impossible for watermen to make a living these days, Parks is still extremely satis fied with his tug career.

Working for Baltimorebased Vane Brothers, Parks is the captain of the tug Roanoke, hauling diesel fuel up the Wicomico River to Salisbury.

His experience as a waterman provides a great foundation for learning how to maneuver a tugboat and barge through the Bay’s tributaries.

When asked how his background prepared him for tug work, Parks

explains “Any given waterman, the things they know is tide and weather… also currents, knowing when it’s going to be flood tide or ebb tide.” Though he no longer pulls crab pots for a living, he will always be rooted in the ways of the Bay.

“I was a waterman all my life,” he says, “Matter of fact, I tell people, I still am.”

9 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 10 curator’s corner
Story & photos by Michelle Zacks (top) The harbor pilot launch idles beside the MSC Rachele, allowing the bay pilot to disembark, as the tug Surrie Moran approaches. (bottom) Aboard the Robert E. McAllister, Captain Robert Dempsey and Deck Utility Steve Marks wait for the MSC Rachele to pass under the Francis Scott Key Bridge, ready to help dock her at the Seagirt Marine Terminal. McAllister tug Robert E. McAllister a converted Navy yard tug, is ready for action at the McAllister Towing of Baltimore docks.

education

What’s Fresh?

Seasonal Selections from Education

As the weather grew colder, the education department took advantage of the lull to implement new initiatives—volunteer field trips and a volunteer book club. The lecture series, “An Abundant and Fruitful Land: Foodways of the Chesapeake,” warmed the intellect and spirits (sometimes with spirits) of those who attended our sold-out programs. And hardy young souls ventured out onto campus to learn about winter birds, windy days, and how the Chesapeake Bay was formed from a glacier in our children’s program, ChesAdventures.

We welcomed an art show, featuring the creative talent of students throughout the watershed in the “Chesapeake Bay Revival Art Contest,” offered collaboratively with the Chesapeake Bay Trust and a children’s book author.

Looking ahead, we’ve got every educational opportunity you can imagine: training sessions, workshops, classes, camps, lectures, and festivals. Keep up with the education department

This Spring, “Step Out” with the ALL

This past winter, The Academy for Lifelong Learning (ALL) welcomed nearly 70 members and instructors to its annual meeting at the Museum. Tom Hollingshead, President of ALL since 2010, passed the leadership baton to the new president, Ronald Lesher. Robert Lippson will fill the role of vice president formerly held by Bob Feldhuhn, and John Ford and Brice Gamber will continue in their roles as secretary and treasurer respectively. Three new members of the executive committee were introduced: Sam Barnett of Easton, Kate Mann of Royal Oak, and Beverly Martin of Easton. This spring, ALL will once again offer its popular walking tour of the Easton Airport (April 19, May 17 & June 21) in which participants learn what a local airport can mean to a community. On May 10, ALL travels to the home of landscape designer and sculptor Jane Kirch. Other ALL field trips include a trip to the National Air and Space Museum in

A Chessie and water go together like scrapple and eggs.

The Bay’s Own Breed

The moment before release is the most magnifi cent. Their entire body trembles with intent and purpose, thick muscles vibrate with contained energy crawling down the barrel chest to wet, muddy hocks shivering with instinct. Each quick breath a steamy dragon waft, puffing out in white bursts that linger in the frigid morning air. Their blonde eyes pulse from owner to bird and back again, watching, waiting in delicious and terrible anticipation. They were made for this. They are Chesapeake Bay retrievers.

by following our new blog and learn about the Chesapeake’s history, people, and environment on Beautiful Swimmers, at beautifulswimmers.tumblr.org.

A Revitalized Center for Chesapeake Studies

Chantilly, VA (June 5), two visits to the Naval Academy in Annapolis (April 26 & May 16), a visit to the Calhoon MEBA Engineering School in Easton (May 22), and three visits to Poplar Island (June 14, July 20 & August 7).

ALL offers unique programs of public interest in the fields of history, literature, art, science, religion, leisure, sports, current affairs and more. Call the Museum at 410-745-2916 for more information, visit cbmm.org/all, or find us on Facebook.

In 1996, the Breene M. Kerr Center for Chesapeake Studies (CCS) was created to strengthen the Museum’s connections with the region’s scholarly institutions while translating significant new research into engaging visitor expe riences. In other words, it would serve as a think tank for the study of the history of the Bay and its people. Over the years, the Center has realized notable accomplishments such as Oystering on the Chesapeake, the first exhibit designed using extensive original research by the Center, and Chesapeake People, a program allowing tradition bearers such as watermen, crabpickers, and decoy carvers to share their experiences and skills with Museum visitors.

Seeking to revitalize the Center, the Museum hired a new director and a professional folklorist to expand the folklife programs, increase collaborations with universities and cultural institu tions, enhance the internship program, and emphasize new research in public programming—like the new exhibit Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Tugboats.

The Center’s immediate goal is to encourage scholars, members, and the public to see the Museum not just as a repository for objects, but also as a center for civic engagement: a place where stakeholders—people who love the Bay—share their perspectives and use the Museum’s resources, collections, stories, exhibits, and events to help make sense of the past while making informed decisions about the future.

One of the recent initiatives of the Center is its partnership with Washington College’s Center for Environment & Society. Chesapeake Semester is an innovative program that entails intensive study, field work, and outdoor adventure. This is not your typical college course— participants study the complex history, ecology, and culture of the Bay as a microcosm of the challenges and transitions confronting coastal communities around the world.

The Museum hosts student orienta tion while providing research resources, serves as a liaison to watermen, artists, and other collaborators, and assists with student exhibitions. While on campus, students examine exhibits, speak with artists and shipwrights, have discussions about contemporary issues, and even get a chance to explore artifacts in the Museum’s private collection.

Spending more than 50 days in the field, students link classroom discussions with first-hand experiences in the watershed. During this past fall semester students traveled to 50 different sites and met with 40 guest lecturers including policy makers, watermen, farmers, scientists, and artists. Connecting students to the land and water fosters a powerful sense of place, and gives students a better understanding of the human and social dimensions of diverse issues.

Students have an opportunity to study the Chesapeake in depth, explore solutions, and examine the nexus between policy and people’s everyday lives. This is exactly the kind of interdisciplinary study and innovative collaboration that the Center will develop and expand.

For more information contact CCS’s Director Robert Forloney at 410-745-4959 or email rforloney@cbmm.org.

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research
Long-time members and new members alike enjoy ALL’s Annual Meeting and Winter Social. Ronald Lesher, President of ALL, Kate Mann, Dorothy Parker, Beverly Martin and Tom Hollingshead. In addition to exploring Museum exhibits, Chesapeake Semester students are put to work raising the sail of the Rebecca T. Ruark, the oldest working skipjack on the Bay, and listening to Captain Wade Murphy, jr.
PhoTo CouRTESy oF WILSoN WyATT
Photo by Cam McCutchen

THE REAL

Rosie Parks

As the historic skipjack Rosie Parks is restored plank by plank, the family tree of the real Rosie Parks is regenerating branch by branch. The descendants of Rosina Todd Parks, a small woman who bore four sons and died young after a hard life on southern Dorchester County’s waterfront, are keeping their family history alive by retelling stories that have been passed down for generations.

Standing on the doghouse of the skipjack Rosie during a recent family reunion at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, the real Rosie’s great-grandson, Pres Harding of Chestertown, put it this way, “This has been a grand thing for the family. This project is not only restoring the boat, it is restoring the family.” Rosie Parks’ famous shipbuilding son, Bronza, built the skipjack for her famous oysterman son, Orville, in 1955— 53 years after she died at the age of 26. Museum shipwright Marc Barto and his team of apprentices and volunteers are one year into a three-year restoration and demonstration project on the skipjack. While the first of the Parks’ family reunions next to the Rosie was a big success in November, family members are already looking forward to the re-launch in 2013.

“We were all overwhelmed by what the Museum did for the family,” says Mary Parks Harding, Pres’ mother and the daughter of Bronza Parks. “It was one of the greatest tributes to my father that I have ever seen.” Family members posed for group photos next to a life-size photo cut-out of Bronza during the reunion.

“I had purchased a photo of my father at an auction,” Mary Harding says. “I told my son we should donate it to the Museum, but when we got there, we found they already had it and had made that cut-out of him from it.”

Bronza Parks was one of the best-known shipwrights on the Chesapeake in the mid-1900s. He built hundreds of boats in his shop, ranging from crab skiffs to cabin cruisers, before being shot to death by a mentally disturbed customer in 1958. His brother, Orville—who was honored by then-Governor J. Millard Tawes with the title “Admiral of the Chesapeake” for his oystering and sailing skills, retired from a life on the water in 1974 at the age of 78. He sold the Rosie Parks to the Museum in 1975 and died in April of 1976 at the age of 80. Orville was born in 1896, the first of Robert William

real Rosie Parks, date unknown.

Wesley and Rosina Parks’ four sons in Wingate. He was followed by Robert in 1897, Bronza in 1899, and Rosen in 1900. Rosen, the last of the Parks brothers, passed away in 1989. Mary Harding says family members are not sure what caused Rosie’s death in 1902. Some speculated it was caused by having four babies so close together, but Mary Harding doesn’t think that was a factor because she lived two more years. “It must have been something else,” she says.

After Rosie’s death, the boys were raised with the help of relatives in their small, close-knit community. Their father later remarried and had five daughters, Mary Harding says. But tragedy continued to follow the Parks family. Robert W. W. Parks was killed in 1929 in a dramatic accident.

“His car stalled on the train tracks down around Pocomoke, and he was hit by the train and killed,” Mary Harding says. “I remember the day, and I was only about two at the time, but I remem ber when they came to the house and told Dad his father had been killed.”

But not all of the Parks family stories have sad endings, with tales of life in the boatshop and on the water shared among the four generations at the family gathering. The reunion started small when several members and Museum staff began exchanging e-mails about getting together to share a bushel or two of oysters during the OysterFest at the Museum in early November, 2011.

It kept spreading until 57 of Robert and Rosie’s offspring showed up, some traveling from as far away as Florida and New Mexico. Orville’s grandson Tom Parks kept his younger cousins, nephews and nieces enthralled with his stories of growing up with the old waterman. “I used to go out with him during Christmas break when I was seven or eight,” he says. “I got chicken pox when we were out dredging near the bottom of the Choptank River.”

He says his father, who was part of the crew, took him ashore in the skiff but the houses they went to were unoccupied summer homes. “We walked to a general store in a snow storm where we called my mother and she came and got me. One of my earliest memories of the Rosie is getting chicken pox in a snow storm at Christmas.” Tom Parks says that his grandfather was known around the Bay for being one of the most daring of the skipjack captains.

“If there was money to be made, he would go drudging,” he says. Tom Parks

remembers the 1969-70 oyster season when he crewed with Orville. “We were tied up in Chesapeake Beach,” he says.

“There were 27 dredge boats tied up in there one day. Only three of us went out, the rest stayed tied to the pier because it was blowing, it was blowing bad.”

“We were the only ones to make it back to Chesapeake Beach. The rest couldn’t make it back in and they ran up to Annapolis,” Tom says.

“He stuck her in the mud a little,” he recalls “We got the sail down, launched the push boat and went back into the harbor. We got 150 bushels of oysters that day. He knew enough about the Bay so he knew what he was doing. We were the only boat in the harbor that made money that day.”

And then there was the racing. Orville Parks liked to take home the prize money, and usually did. “He was quite serious about his racing,” Tom says. “He didn’t go out there just to sail, he went out there to win, so you had to be ready.”

To illustrate how serious he was, Orville told his racing crew that when he was a young man, he took his father racing with him on a blustery day on the Potomac River.

“Midway through the race, his father went forward and cut the halyard to the main so the sail fell,” Tom says. “Because he figured his son was going to sink his boat if that was what it took to win the race. He knew he would drive that boat under if he needed to, just to win the race.”

A story that has been told through the generations is the one about how Orville came to name his boat after his late mother. He was six years old when the real Rosie Parks died and the only one of her four boys who was old enough to have a clear memory of her.

“We were on the Bay and the wind was from the south and the seas were running 12 to 14 feet high. We couldn’t launch the push boat because the sea was too high. Every time we went down a swell you could feel the centerboard hit the bottom. We had to sail in between the rock breakwaters at Chesapeake Beach.”

Tom says they had only a small bit of the main up as his grandfather eased the Rosie into the harbor and headed for the shallow side of the channel.

He was a soldier in World War I and was on a battlefield in Europe when he was hit by a German gas attack. While he was struggling with the effects of the gas, he told his family, his mother came to him and said, “Orville, you can make it.”

Orville told his grandchildren, “So that is why I named my boat Rosie Parks because I knew my mother would look out for me while I was on the water.”

You can keep up with the restoration process by visiting cbmm.org/rosieparks.html.

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The (top) Mary Parks Harding, Bronza’s daughter. (bottom) Tom Parks, grandson of Orville, helps shipwrights restore Rosie.

Museum Interns:

where are they now?

Many recall internships fondly, as the pinnacle of their college education. Forced out into the “real world,” a good internship will test your mettle and put into practice everything you’ve spent the last few years learning. A quality internship will set you up to enter the workforce with a little bit of experience under your belt and, if you’re lucky, some connections to help you along.

Administered by the Breene M. Kerr Center for Chesapeake Studies (CCS), a CBMM internship is an innovative ten-week program in research and hands-on museum practice. Students are given the opportunity to learn from seasoned experts who monitor, observe, and guide their professional development.

Regular seminars introduce interns to other departments as well as the best practices of a variety of museums and educational organizations. The Museum’s program stands out because interns interact with different audiences, provide various visitor experiences, are able to attend professional staff meetings, and have the opportunity to meet and network with diverse museum professionals. Internships are a great way to gain practical experience, with projects completed in research, collections, folklore, and education at the Museum.

For more information, contact CCS Director Robert Forloney at 410-745-4959 or rforloney@cbmm.org

Paige Martin

Education

Intern, 2011

Hometown: Riverton, NJ

When Washington College junior Paige Martin applied to become an education intern, she had already garnered plenty of experience inside a classroom, but wanted more experience teaching outside of a classroom.

“I was actually able to pick up a live blue crab and show kids the differences between a male and a female,” recalls Martin. “That is something you would rarely find inside the classroom and it gave me a new perspective on teaching.”

Martin worked on a variety of projects assisting the Kids Club instructor with daily lessons for the half-day summer camp, creating drop-in activities for families visiting the Museum, and running educational activities at major summer events. Martin’s biggest project was to create family learning bags for the Welcome Center.

“My internship here changed my view of the typical museum and I think it does the same for every visitor,” says Martin. Now a Washington College senior, Martin is majoring in human development with a certification in elementary education. She is student-teaching in a 3rd grade classroom, and just taught her first lesson about the Chesapeake Bay.

Ken Hickman

Curatorial Intern, 1999

Hometown: West Chester, PA

After completing an assistantship at the University of Delaware’s Center for Historical Architecture & Design for his master’s degree in history/museum studies, Ken Hickman joined the Museum as a curatorial intern.

Hickman was tasked with conducting a historical survey of the Museum’s three administration buildings––the Eagle, Dodson, and Higgins houses––prior to

their restoration. The surveys included detailed research regarding ownership of the properties, construction of the houses, and their evolution through time.Hickman also created measured drawings of each structure for the archives.

“The staff really took a personal interest in our activities both during and after work hours. Everyone was willing to include interns in whatever activities were taking place. The personal connections I made at the museum continue to serve me to this day.”

Since 2006, Hickman has served as the director of the Penn State University’s All-Sports Museum (where he majored in history and political science, graduat ing in 1998). After his Museum intern ship and prior to returning to Penn State, Hickman was the curator and develop ment director at the USS Constellation in Baltimore and the curator at the Ameri can Merchant Marine Museum in Kings Point, NY.

Jill Ferris

Education Intern, 2010

Hometown: Lockport, Ny

While fellow classmates were wading through mounds of paperwork during their summer internships, Jill Ferris was co-leading Kids Club, coordinating volunteers for the Chesapeake Folk Festival, and leading school and camp tours. At the time, she was working toward her master’s degree in history museum studies in the Cooperstown, NY graduate program.

While at the Museum, Ferris designed a preschool scavenger hunt and family learning map, and designed two interpretive panels for features in the front of the administration offices.

“I loved that was able to do meaningful work as an intern and use my experience to address some of the Museum’s needs,” recalls Ferris.

She adds that the Museum was a perfect

place to put her training into practice and allowed her to work on teaching skills and develop confidence in front of audiences. Through connections with the Museum, she joined St. Michaels’ Wednesday Night Race committee and the Museum’s Edmee S. log canoe crew.

Ferris currently teaches 8th grade social studies at Matapeake Middle School in Stevensville, MD.

Jonathan Olly

Curatorial Intern, 2004

Hometown: hubbardston, MA

After finishing his bachelor’s degree in history at the University of Massachusetts, Jonathan Olly interned at the New Bedford Whaling Museum in Massachusetts, and as a sailing apprentice on the sloop Clearwater in Poughkeepsie, NY, before applying to the Museum.

During his Museum apprenticeship, Olly wrote articles for the Museum’s quarterly publication, photographed artifacts and manuscripts, and helped to pack up and transport the Burgess Collection.

“There’s no expectation of needing to know a lot about the Chesapeake or boats, you’re not tied to any one project, and you’ll come away with a better understanding of how to tell stories with objects,” says Olly.

“There were lots of small experiences to see what various Museum jobs en tailed, whether a curator, registrar, ex hibit designer, or shipwright. I would definitely recommend this experience to others. Museums that provide intern housing and a stipend are rare, and those with a quality internship program are rarer still,” he adds.

Olly, now a graduate student in American studies at Brown University in Rhode Island, is writing a dissertation that examines how various groups re-imagined New England’s maritime history in the 20th century for tourism and commerce.

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Marie Thomas

Megan Anderson

Education/Folklife Intern, 2007

Hometown: Detroit, MI

Megan Anderson interned at the Museum before her last semester at Michigan State University, working on a variety of projects for both the education and folklife departments. Anderson created a training program for volunteer interpreters on “Marshes: The Disappearing Edens,” exhibit.

She coordinated and expanded the Chesapeake People program, youth and family programs, and assisted with the Kids Club summer camp. In addition, Anderson wrote the interpretation for the Edna E. Lockwood.

“I learned so much from my internship supervisor––invaluable lessons not only about education and learning, but also on time management, managing expectations, and working through internal politics.”

Anderson adds that her responsibilities and experiences as an intern set her apart from other recent college graduates when applying for jobs––in particular her experience of creating a volunteer training curriculum, which helped her to land her first full-time job.

Anderson is a training project coordinator at St. Augustine College in Chicago’s Institute for Workforce Education’s Center for Non-Profit Effectiveness where she conducts outreach to non-profits, creating customized training programs to help them run more efficiently.

Kim Kraeer

Education Intern, 2007

Hometown: Denton, MD

Having just graduated from Washington College with a biology degree, Kim Kraeer was eager to gain some hands-on experience. In addition to helping with Kids Club during her internship, Kraeer helped to develop and implement a new

curriculum for ecology cruises aboard the Museum’s replica buyboat, Mister Jim.

“My internship gave me great teaching experience––developing content and presenting it, as well as training docents,” says Kraeer. She enjoyed her time at the Museum so much, she returned to take part in a grant-funded program aide position for several months.

“The Museum really made a point to give us projects that matched our own particular interests and strengths,” she adds.

Kraeer went on to graduate from American University with a master’s degree in biology, where she was able to use the teaching experience she acquired at the Museum to teach undergraduate biology. Now, Kraeer is a marine mammal assistant trainer at the National Aquarium in Baltimore, where she works specifi cally with the dolphins, in all aspects of their care and training, including show presentations for the public.

Michelle Zacks

Folklife Intern, 2009 Hometown: hamden, CT

As a PhD candidate at the University of Hawai‘i (UH), Michelle Zacks wrote her dissertation on the environmental history of the mullet fishery of southwest Florida. She wanted experience at a maritime museum, and CBMM was her first choice.

Zacks was the folklife intern for the first annual Chesapeake Folk Festival, and very involved in much of the original planning for the scope and shape of the event. Zacks conducted research and field work on women involved in the work and home life of Chesapeake watermen, on pound net fishing, and on other types of net fishing. She helped to coordinate logistics, plan and build festival exhibits, and write text panels and program text.

“CBMM’s internship offers the experience of dealing with real-life constraints, in terms of budgets, deadlines, and logistics. It gave me a deep appreciation for the necessary compromises you have to make in order to translate your grand dreams and ideas into real programs,” says Zacks.

Zacks is almost finished with her dissertation for UH and is currently working part-time as the Museum’s folklorist, focusing on interviews with captains and crew of Chesapeake tugs and barges for the upcoming Tug exhibit, in addition to planning the Folk Festival for July 28.

Julie Broadbent

Folklife Intern, 2011 Hometown: Cleveland, oh

As a folklife intern this past summer, Julie Broadbent helped plan the Chesapeake Folk Festival in July, with duties ranging from inviting participants, to helping design the program and assisting with other educational components of the event.

“Besides learning how to pick a crab, I learned how crucial events, like the Chesapeake Folk Festival, are connecting local communities to the Museum,” comments Broadbent. “I met a waterman from Rock Hall who invited me to go pound net fishing. This was the major leagues of fishing––my singular blue gill fish was outmatched when 300 pounds of rockfish, catfish, and perch were harvested in less than three hours.”

Broadbent is currently completing her master’s degree in history museum studies in the Cooperstown,NY,graduate program and is writing her thesis on Eastern Shore women in the seafood industry.

“As I enter the museum field, the relationship-building and communication skills I learned at CBMM are proving invaluable,” she adds.

Volunteer Profile: Model Guild

Members of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum’s Model Guild are hardly what you would call retired. With the ninth annual Maritime Model Expo coming up May 19–20, the recent addition of a milling machine to campus, weekend workshops, weekly meetings, and model kit production for the Museum Store, members of the Model Guild are some of the Museum’s most dedicated volunteers.

The Model Guild began in the mid1980s as the brainchild of Norman Stewart, who was offering classes in model boatbuilding in the Steamboat Building. In 1987, Bob Mason (the Guild’s current director) and his wife took an advanced class building a standard workboat, and a passion was sparked. It was around this time that then curator Richard Dodds asked the Guild to create a model depicting the James Adams Floating Theater to complement an upcoming exhibit which later became so popular it was commissioned to travel the region as a mobile exhibit, educating others about the Museum.

Due to the success of this exhibit piece, the Guild generated more support, formed a core group, and received additional special requests for models. The Guild began work on acquiring funds to further their mission of supporting the curatorial and educational needs of the Museum and interpreting the skill and art of model boatbuilding to the public.

When Stewart decided to start taking his winters in Florida, Mason took

over the daily operations of the club, running meetings, teach ing classes, and creating more kits for the Museum Store. As their operation grew, the Guild’s meeting area expanded to the Bay History building in 2010.

“When this group started, it was just four people. Through Bob’s leadership, he has expanded our vision,” says Ed Santelmann, the developer of the Guild’s half-hull model class which he teaches. After attending the Cabin Fever Expo in York, PA, the largest North American model engineering show in the country, Mason helped to establish the inaugural Maritime Model Expo in 2003. In 2008, Stewart passed away unexpectedly, leaving official directorship to Mason.

“Classes are still offered following the style and format that Norm [Stewart] created. We are grateful for the model legacy he has created,” says Mason. This past December a computerized numerically controlled (CNC) mill ing machine was delivered to campus.

The machine, donated nearly 10 years ago from Chesapeake College, was

previously located in Centreville due to lack of space at the Museum. The milling machine is instrumental in helping the Guild create their model kits, cutting small, intricate parts, which are carved into three-dimensional shapes from wooden blocks.

The Model Guild is offering a beginner model boatbuilding workshop on March 31 and April 1. See the calendar of events on page 19 for more informa tion. New members with all levels of experience are welcome.

For more information on the Model Guild and its activities, please contact Bob Mason at 410-745-3266 or email bobmason@atlanticbb.net.

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(Clockwise from left) Norman Stewart, the founder of the Model Guild, and his wife Millie. The Model Guild’s headquarters inside the Bay History Building. Bob Mason and Bob Cimba with the new milling machine.

calendar

april/may/june Summer Sailing Program

June – August

Explore the Miles River and learn maritime skills in our Summer Sailing Program, where new sailors and old salts gain the confidence to sail a small boat in a fun, safe, and encour aging environment. Pre-registration required, contact Helen Van Fleet at 410-745-4941.

junior Sailing, ages 8-16

Mon.–Fri., 8:30am–12noon or 1–4:30pm $200 members, $225 non-members

BASIC – offered as an introduction to water safety, rigging, boat handling, and docking, this course is designed for new sailors or those who need to solidify their skills before starting the intermediate level.

INTERMEDIATE – helps students to learn more complex sailing skills, including right-of-way rules, boat handling, local navigation, and proper sail trim.

ADVANCED – Designed for students who have mastered their interme diate level skills, this course focuses on boat handling and sail trim.

Activities include exploring aspects of dinghy racing and the racing rules of sailing as well as racing starts and tactics.

– jUNIOR SAILING BASIC –

June 11 – 15

June 18 – 22

June 25 – 29

July 2 – 6

July 9 – 13

July 6 – 20

July 23 – 27

July 30 – August 3

August 6 – 10

8:30am – noon

or 1 – 4:30pm

8:30am – noon

8:30am – noon

8:30am – noon

1 – 4:30pm

8:30am – noon

8:30am – noon

8:30am – noon

1 – 4:30pm

– jUNIOR SAILING INTERMEDIATE –

june 18 – 22

july 2 – 6

july 6 – 20

july 30 – August 3

Boater Safety Courses

April 17 & 18, May 16 & 17, June 12 & 13 July 17 & 18, August 14 & 15

6 10pm, $25 per two-evening session

Maryland boaters born after July 1, 1972 are required to have a Certificate of Boating Safety Education.The certificate is obtained by passing a Department of Natural Resources-approved course, and is good for life.The course is a great way to become a more confident and competent boater. Pre-registration required, contact Helen Van Fleet at 410-745-4941.

Kids Club

June – July $100 members, $120 non-members. Membership rates apply if camper’s parent or guardian is a member. Scholarships are available.

The Museum’s weekly Kids Club is a half-day, hands-on Chesapeake-focused camp for kids ages 4 to 7, where children learn about the Bay firsthand through activities, stories, games, and crafts. Pre-registration required, contact Helen Van Fleet at 410-745-4941.

Ages 4 – 5 9:30am – 12:30pm

june 25 - 29 july 9 - 13

Ages 6 – 7 9:30am – 12:30pm

july 2 - 6 july 16 - 20

Apprentice For a Day Public Boatbuilding Program

North Shore Sailing Skiff, “Miss B” Model Sat. & Sun., 10am-4pm. $35 members, $45 non-members. Journeyman’s special available (any 4 classes: $125 members, $170 non-members).

1 – 4:30pm 1 – 4:30pm 1 – 4:30pm 1 – 4:30pm

– jUNIOR SAILING ADVANCED –

Learn traditional boatbuilding under the direction of a Museum shipwright. Be a part of the whole 17-week process, or just sign up for those aspects of building a boat that you want to learn. Must be 16 or older unless accompanied by an adult. Call 410-745-2916 to register.

Beginner Model Boatbuilding

Saturday, March 31 & Sunday, April1

9am-5pm, $80 members, $95 non-members

april

Opening Reception

Gunning Among Friends: Chesapeake Waterfowl Hunting Clubs

Friday, April 13 5:30pm, Small Boat Shed

Join fellow Museum members and the East Coast Decoy Collectors Club for a reception to kick off and celebrate the opening of this new exhibit. Lite fare served. Special thanks to Judy & Henry Stansbury for sponsoring the reception. Free for members. Space is limited, RSVP by April 6 to Helen Van Fleet at 410-745-4941.

Member Night

Blessing of the Fleet

Friday, April 18 at 4pm

Celebrate this year’s boating season with members, volunteers, and boatyard staff for an official ceremony honoring our own floating fleet of Bay boats, as well as local work boats. Ceremony will be held under the Hooper Strait Lighthouse (weather permitting). Refreshments served. Free for members. RSVP by April 17 to Debbie Collison at 410-745-4991.

Guided Tour

Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Tugboats

Saturday, April 21 11am, Van Lennep Auditorium

Come to the official opening of the new exhibit where Chief Curator Pete Lesher will lead a guided tour. Light refresh ments served. Free for members.

may

Schooner Sultana Visit

Saturday, May 5 – Sunday, May, 13 open for boarding on Tuesday, May 8, 2:30-4:30pm

The replica schooner Sultana will be docked along the Museum’s harbor-side for five days. Read more on page 6.

Maritime Model Expo

Saturday, May 19 & Sunday, May 20

Sat., 10am–4pm & Sun., 10am–3pm

Free for members or with Museum admission

Held in conjunction by the Museum’s Model Guild and the North American Steamboat Modelers Association, this expo includes radio-controlled models powered by steam, battery, and wind. Static displays of highly-detailed and realistic models by the Washington Ship Model Society and others will be featured, as well as activities for children.

The Elf Classic Yacht Race

Saturday, May 19

Race finish 4pm at the Museum (time subject to weather and sailing conditions). Free for members or with Museum admission

Join Elf and other classic sailing yachts for the Elf Classic yacht race—a true yachtsman’s race.The Eastport Yacht Club in Annapolis will serve as the departure point. This event is organized by the Classic Yacht Restoration Guild to recreate the sensibilities of yacht racing of the 1880s when the races began on shore, included the row to the boat on mooring or anchor, making sail and reversing the process at the finish, in this case signing the race log at the Tolchester Bandstand on the grounds of the Museum.

To participate in the event, or to inquire about sponsorships, contact Rick Carrion at elf1888@earthlink.net or visit cyrg.org/elfclassic.htm.

Member Night

Rosie Parks Skipjack

Restoration Project Progress Report

Wednesday, May 23 at 6pm in Museum Boatyard

Join master shipwright and project manager Marc Barto as he talks about the three-year restoration of the Museum’s skip jack Rosie Parks. Board-by-board, nail-by-nail, learn how the revered old skipjack is being brought back to her former life. Free, RSVP by May 22 to Debbie Collison at 410-745-4991.

june

june 25 – 29

july 23 – 27 1 – 4:30pm 1 – 4:30pm

Adult & Teen Basic Sailing Weekend

Sat. & Sun., July 14-15 and August 4-5, 1-4:30pm $200 members, $225 non-members

Adult and teen sailors can learn or improve their sailing skills. Learn the principles of sailing a small 15-foot boat. Instructors teach small boat handling, boating safety, and sail theory.

Tools and materials supplied.

The Museum’s Model Guild leads participants step-by-step to create a half-hull model of the clipper Pride of Baltimore II. Band sawed from a two-toned wood block and carved to the rounded shape of the Pride’s hull, the half-hull model is then mounted on a baseboard to form a fine wall display. For ages 12 and up and all skill levels welcome. A special rate for a parentchild team can accomodate younger children. Pre-registration required by March 26 by calling 410-745-2916.

Frederick Douglass Day

Saturday, May 5, 2012

10am 4pm; Free for members, $10 for adults, kids under 16 free

Celebrate Talbot County’s favorite son and one of America’s most important 19th-century leaders. Enjoy entertainment, food, educational activities, and live music. Read more on page 22.

In Concert: 229th Maryland Army National Guard Band

Tuesday, June 12, 7pm

Free, bring chairs & blankets

The acclaimed 229th Maryland Army National Guard Band performs patriotic music selections spanning a number of eras and genres. Museum members enjoy refreshments served at a special VIP hospitality area during the concert.

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25th Antique & Classic Boat Festival (ACBF)

Father’s Day Weekend, Friday, June 15 through Sunday, June 17 Fri., 11am–5pm; Sat., 10am–5pm; Sun., 10am–2pm

Free for members or with Museum admission

This annual boat event is the largest of its kind in the Mid-Atlantic region, featuring more than 100 antique and classic boats, boatbuilding demonstrations, maritime artists and craftsmen, craft vendors, classic used boats, motors, and nautical flea market, along with live music, food, and more.

A special feature this year is “The Arts at Navy Point,” a showcase of juried artists and craftsmen presenting maritime-themed home, boat, and wall decor items. This year features the largest fleet of antique Silver Arrow Chris-Craft boats for ACBF’s silver anniversary, made in limited production for only two years. These are rare boats powered by big V-8 engines, with some coming as far away as Florida. This event is hosted by the Chesapeake Bay Chapter of the Antique and Classic Boat Society International in cooperation with the Museum.

MARK YOUR CALENDARS

Big Band Night/Fireworks

Saturday, June 30

Chesapeake Folk Festival

Saturday, July 28

Watermen’s Appreciation Day

Sunday, August 12

HMS Bounty Visit

Thursday, June 14–Monday, June 18 open for boarding with dockside tours available for an additional fee of $10 adults, $5 for children, and free for children five and under

The replica ship HMS Bounty will be docked along the Museum’s harbor-side during ACBF. Read more on page 6.

Vikings on the Chesapeake

Friday, June 22–Monday, June 25 Free for members or with paid admission

The Leif Ericson Viking Ship Norseman, a half-scale replica of the famous Gokstad ship, will be at the Museum for three days. Read more on page 6.

Frederick Douglass Day

Learning from the past, educating for the future

Saturday, May 5, 2012

15th Annual Charity Boat Auction

Labor Day Weekend

Saturday, September 1

St. Michaels Concours d’Elegance Sunday, September 30

30th Annual Mid-Atlantic Small Craft Festival

Fri., Sat., Sun., October 5, 6 & 7

Maritime Monster Mash

Friday, October 19

OysterFest Saturday, November 3

The Frederick Douglass Honor Society (FDHS) and the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum are partnering again to present Frederick Douglass Day on Saturday, May 5, 2012 at the Museum.

From 10am to 4pm, this day-long celebration features exhibits about Douglass’ life and work, genealogy workshops, cooking demonstrations, dance, live music, regional foods, and activities for children to learn about the diversity of cultural traditions established in our early heritage. Shipbuilding techniques used by Douglass will also be demonstrated at the boatshop.

The first Frederick Douglass Day was held at the Museum in October 2010, drawing more than 500 people to the Museum’s waterfront campus and raising $10,000 for the Frederick Douglass statue unveiled at the Talbot County Courthouse in June, 2011.

In keeping with this year’s theme, “Learning from the past, educating for the future,” the Museum and FDHS have once again partnered with all Talbot County schools to host a countywide 8th grade Frederick Douglass essay contest. Contest winners will read their entries at Frederick Douglass Day and receive gifts and prizes from the Museum and local organizations.

New this year is a cooking demonstration by Michael Twitty, a recognized

(top right) From left, William Wells, young Frederick Douglass, Mary Thomas, judge james Thomas, and Norman Anderson at the inaugural Frederick Douglass Day. (bottom right) Young attendees try their hand at fishing off the docks of Water man’s Wharf.

culinary historian, community scholar, and living history interpreter focusing on historic African American food and folk culture. Twitty will be holding open-fire cooking demonstrations at the Museum’s Mitchell House, which belonged to Douglass’ sister. Twitty involves his audience in discussions about heirloom crops and seeds, wild food, forag ing methods, and the cooking techniques that create a uniquely African American cultural tradition.

Local food vendors will include Darnell’s Grill, Milestone, Sam’s Pizza, Scottish Highland Creamery, and BBQ chicken from the Union United Methodist Church in St. Michaels. In addition to dance, music, and live demonstrations,

families will have the opportunity to see history come alive by chatting with a young Frederick Douglass interpreter, creating their own copy of Douglass’ newspaper, the North Star, and trying out the clothes and tools of a 19th century free black sailor in a vintage photo booth activity.

Donations and proceeds benefit the Frederick Douglass Endowed Scholarship Fund and Museum educational programs.

Admission is $10 for adults, and free for museum members and kids under 16. For more information, call the museum at 410-745-2916.

21 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 22 calendar
The restored Silver Arrow Chris Craft runabout, belonging to Dick Hickman of Wrightsville, PA, will lead the 100 plus boats on display at the Museum for the silver anniversary of the Antique and Classic Boat Festival, coming on this Father’s Day weekend.

Annual Fund Honor Roll on the rail Rosie Parks

Winter’s mild temperatures allowed for more work on the skipjack Rosie Parks, and as a result, Rosie’s restoration is ahead of schedule. With the chine logs completely replaced and installed, the crew turned their focus to the side planking. After clamping the new chine plank into place, the crew worked their way up, installing new side planks on both sides of Rosie.

Follow Rosie’s progress by visiting us online at cbmm.org/rosieparks.html, watching our Rosie Parks Restoration Project updates on YouTube, reading our blog, Chesapeakeboats.blogspot.com, or following us on Facebook.

(Top, left to right) The new chine is clamped into place. Shipwright Apprentice India Gilham-Westerman attaches the chine plank.

(Bottom, left to right) Rosie during original construction juxtaposed with Rosie under restoration with new side planks.

Delaware

The tug Delaware’s centennial restoration continues just in time for the Museum’s new Push and Pull: Life on Chesapeake Tugboats exhibit, opening in the Steamboat building April 21 and running through 2014. New carlins represent one of the most significant aspects of Delaware’s restoration, along with new side deck beams, refurbished fuel tanks and new tank brackets. Half of the tug’s existing sole was replaced with southern yellow pine. In maintaining the historical accuracy of the restoration project, port holes were cut and installed into the forward topside planking and Delaware’s exterior cabinside beadboard was replaced with custom-milled yellow pine.

Twelve window sashes have been stripped and repainted, using all original materials. Topside and bottom were painted prior to Delaware’s early-March splash, leaving a few other cosmetic upgrades to be completed once launched As part of her centennial celebration, the river tug will be outfitted to depict what life on a tugboat looked like at the time Delaware worked the Chesapeake Bay and her tributaries. This summer you may find the 1912 river tug at a nearby event or at one of Maryland’s ports of call as she takes a celebratory centennial tour out on the Chesapeake. Otherwise she’ll be dockside in Fogg’s Cove near Waterman’s Wharf.

Dory Boat

The Potomac River Dory’s deadwood and shaft alley have been removed, with the deadwood replaced with white oak, an original match. The shaft alley will also be replaced with the same type of wood, before new mid-ship frames milled at the Tuckahoe Sawmill are installed.

Restoration of the 1931 boat, built in Banks O’Dee, MD, and once used for oystering, continues with forefoot bottom planking to be mapped out with ribbands and later replaced.

We are extremely grateful to you, our supporters, for your gifts to the Museum’s Annual Fund, endowment, education programs, bulkhead replacement, Rosie Parks restoration, historic vessel preservation, and those who’ve become Benefactor, Sustaining, and Life members. Your gifts benefit the children and adults served by our education programs, special events, exhibits, and boat restoration programs, and allow us to preserve the artifacts, traditions, heritage, and stories of the people whose lives have been shaped by the Chesapeake Bay. We can’t do it without your generosity! Donors whose gifts were received between November 7 and February 14, 2012, are listed below. The Museum’s Annual Fund closes on April 30, and we are so close to our goal. If you haven’t done so already, please consider donating, or making a second gift—it’s your generosity that enables us to impact more lives with a deeper understanding and appreciation for the Bay. THANK YOU!

Academy for Lifelong Learning

Elizabeth Adams

Air Products Foundation

Nancy Aldrich

Rosemary & George Aldrich

Joyce & Mark Allen

Chrys & Ed Alvarado

Judith & Robert Amdur

Molly & Peirce Anderson

Della & herbert Andrew

Lisa & Jim Andrew

Anonymous

Antique & Classic Boat SocietyChesapeake Bay Chapter

Nancy & CG Appleby

Blenda & Bruce Armistead

Dolores & Edward Arnold

Ashby Commons, L.C.

Sandra & John Ashworth

Lisa & Steven Asplundh

Neva & Edward Asplundh

AT&T Foundation

Robert Austin

Cecil Backus

David Bailey, Jr.

Martha & Mark Bailey

Bank of America Foundation

Linda & Tom Barbour

Katherine & Stephen Bardelman

Donna Barker

Marc Barto

Susan Bastress & Peter Behringer

Lindsay & David Batcheller

Carolyn & Jack Batty

Pattie & Mike Batza

Ardith & Theodore Bayler

Elly & William Bayne

Jeff Bean

Theo B. Bean Foundation

Barbara & Jerry Bechtle

Jean Marie & Duane Beckhorn

holly & Walter Beckwith

Elaine & Ed Bednarz

Ann & Colin Bentley

holly & Bill Bentley

Norma & Donald Berlin

Allan Bernard

Cathi & Franklin Berry

Joy & David Best

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Ginger & Marion Bevard

Kathleen & Paul Bigelman

Ellen & Edward Bilinski

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Carole Bishop

William Blades

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Joyce Bolton & Jeff Watkins

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Amy Bondurant & David Dunn

Anne Marie & John Borneman

Delores Bowens

helen Bower

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Angela & Andrew Boyer

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William Brody

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Norman Brown

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Franz Burda

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Scott Buzby Colleen & Daniel Callahan

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Ashley & Sam Chamberlain

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Jeff Chandler

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Sherri Christenson

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Robert Clagett

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Constellation Energy

united Way Campaign

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Victor Crown

Crystal Trust

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James Curran

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P. Davis

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Carolyn Decker

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helen & Paul Dix

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Thomas Donlan

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Gregory Dowd

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orin Edson

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Elm Street Development Co. Barbara & Eugene Elrod

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Pat & Jak Eskinazi

Georgiana & Alfred Evans

ExxonMobil Foundation, Inc.

Jocelyn & George Eysymontt

Elinor Farquhar

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Farvue Foundation

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Dorothy & Lyle Feisel

Susan & Robert Feldhuhn

Anna & Charles Fichtner

Andrea & Thornton Field

Vanessa & Rodger Findiesen

Gwendolyn & Jay Fink

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Ann Marie & James Flood

Alice & James Forbes Darlene & Jeff Forte

Shirley Foster

Tom Fountain

Karen & Ben Frana

Allison & Jon Franke

23 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 24
Vessel Maintenance Manager Mike Gorman strips and repaints Delaware’s window sashes. Vessel Maintenance Assistant Don MacLeod and volunteer Richard Foa work on the Potomac River Dory boat. Mary Parks Harding, daughter of Bronza Parks (builder of the skipjack Rosie Parks), recently sent us a photo of these coins. Mary writes “Uncle Willie and my father owned a packing house together. It was known as L & P Seafood. The pickers and shuckers were given tokens each time they ‘weighed in’ their work. At the end of the week, they cashed in their tokens for their pay.”

From

Liz & howard Freedlander

Nancy & Edward Frey

Susan & Gerry Friedel

Andrew Friel

The Friel Foundation

SE. W. Friel

Kimberley Fritts & Francis Turner

Berniece & George Fromm

Christina & Earl Furman

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Robin & Charles Garber

Sonia & Pedro Garcia

Mary George & Robert Gast

Joanne & Fred Geiger

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David Gierisch

India Gilham-Westerman

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Trish & Brooke harwood

Ardoth hassler & James Short

Mark hasslinger hattons Garden, LLC

Chris havener

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Carolin head

Frederick hecklinger

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Ada & Martin heilman

Archer Dodson heinzen

Ruth heltne & Bill Clark

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Marian hopkins

Judge William horne

Martha horner

Ann & Luke howard

Embry howell

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Martha & Charles hudson

Governor harry hughes

Kathleen & howard hughes

Diane humphrey

Deanne & Thomas hutchison

Jennie & John hyatt

Inn at Perry Cabin

Norma & Charles Irish

Gugy Irving

Pam & Jerry Jana

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Sherry & David Jeffery

Virginia Jenkins & Thomas Anastasio

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Tim Johnson

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Cynthia & Doug Jurrius

Phil Kable

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Julia Kauffman

Sandy & Ron Kaufman

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Barbro & Kevin Kirk

Joan & Frank Kittredge

Teresa & Paul Klaassen

Margit & Maurice Klein

Jacqueline & Edward Knight

Nancy & Robert Knowles

Emilie Knud-hansen

Linda Laramy

Maria LaWalt

Leslie & Charles Leaver

David Lees

Annabel & Ron Lesher

Mariana & Pete Lesher

Jerilyn Levi & Dennis Truesdale

Pat & Ted Lewers

Jean & Robert Lewis

Susan & David Lewis

Ann & Steve Lindblom

Lois & Larry Lindsley

Joseph Link

hermine & John Linton

Diane & Robert Little

Elizabeth Lord

Katherine Lordi

harriette & Eric Lowery

helena & horace Lowman

Linda & Dick Lowry

Barbara & Ben Lucas

Joan Lunney & William Idler

The Lyric Foundation

Linda & James Maciver

Thomas Mackin

Luann & Read Madary

Eleanor & John Magee

Robert Malson

Becky & Dwight Martin

Brenda & Sperling Martin

Marie Martin & Gary Nylander

Elaine & Tony Masso

Allene & Edward Masters

Carol & Bill May

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harriett & Ellicott McConnell

Constance & Thomas McEvoy

Dorcas & Jeffrey McGuiness

Martha & Michael McMahon Media Zone

John Menard

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Jill & Jack Meyerhoff

Mary & Kenneth Michael

Carol & Bart Michelson

Mid-Shore Community Foundation

Mary & Thomas Milan

Alice & Richards Miller

Diane & Albert Miller

Patrice & herbert Miller

Rich Miller

CBMM captures the heart of what it means to live and breathe the Bay. It doesn’t get any better than the boatbuilding shed, and the view from the top of the lighthouse! - Jerry D., Tripadvisor.com

Elizabeth & Tom hipp

Elizabeth & Worth hobbs

Winifred hobron

Laura & Keith hoffman

Karen & T. J. holland

Teri & Tom hollenshade

Laura & Tom hollingshead

Patricia holloway

Joseph holt

A great day on the shores of the Miles River. This is a wonderful experience for anyone—kids through grandparents. Lots of interactive exhibits in a number of buildings, and the lighthouse is a special treat. - Annapolis Gal, Tripadvisor.com

Clifton Mumford

Jacqueline & William Munch

Judy & Bill Munn

Joan Murray

Diana & Steve Mysliwiec

Peggy & Jim Nallo

Kathleen & John Nash

Judith Needham & Warren Kilmer

Mirna & Conrad Nelson

Revs. Abigail & Mark Nestlehutt

Newport News Shipbuilding

Nancy & Fred Nichols

Doris & Willard Nielsen

Ceci & Rob Nobel

Ethel & Judge John North

Joan & David North

Molly Nussear & Mitchell owens

Carol & John Nyland

Maureen & Jim o’Connell

Nancy o’Connell & Raymond Wiacek

Diane & Kevin o’Connor

Douglass S. oeller

William ogden

Karen & Stephen o’Neill

Margaret orem

Nancy & John orzechowski

JoAnn & Ralph osborn

Christine & hamish osborne

Barbara & Ernest oskin

Rebecca otter & Paul Moorhead

Marguerite & John owens

Norman G. owens Foundation

Talli & Geoff oxnam

Philip Palmer

Jeanette & Philip Parish

Andrew Parker

Dorothy & Frederick Parker

Fran & Sumner Parker

Judy & Tom Parks

Nancy & Bill Parnell

Margaret & Jim Pasquarelli

Terry & Will Passano

Cammy & Tony Passarella

Marlene & John Patmore

Robin Pender

Carol & Jon Petersen

Alice & Robert Petizon

Melissa & John Pflieger

Ken Philips

Elizabeth & Steven Phillips

George Phillips

Kristen Pironis

Chloe & David Pitard

Judge Jay Plager

Ellen & Norm Plummer

Diane & William Poole

Mary Ann & Paul Ray

Paula & William Ray

Martha Read

Joe Redman

Daphne & Philip Reese

Linda & John Regenhardt Bob Reinbold

Christine & Tom Reinert

Eleanor Requard

Mary Restifo

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Joan & Robert Rich

Lucy & George Richards

Vicki & Jay Ricketts

Mary & Fritz Riedlin

Robert Riley

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

John Roberts

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Norman Robinson

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Margaret Roggensack

Karen Roth & John harper

Joyce & Donald Rumsfeld

harriet & William Russell

Paul Rust

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Joann & Wayne Rutledge

Teresa & Keith Rutter

Diana Sable

The Sailing Club of the Chesapeake Rhonda & George Salem

Susan Sampson

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Virginia & Kenneth Sappington

Patricia & Frank Saul Rose & Clifford Sayre Eileen & John Schaffer

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The Schluderberg Foundation

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William Stamm

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Rene’ & Tom Stevenson

Ann & Rudolph Stewart

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Mary Ann & William Stockman

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Sarah Stoner

Margaret & William Stott

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Jeff Strider

Patricia & Seymour Strongin

Sharon & Ric Struthers

Margaret Stubee

Josephine & John Stumpf

Mary & John Swayze

Ann & Mike Sweeney

Lynda & Chuck Teubner

Shirley & Peter Thatcher

Susan & Bill Thomas

Judy & Jeff Thompson

Frankie and Jim Thorington

Marcia Brady Tucker Foundation

Benson & George Tulloch

union united Methodist Church

Susan & James Vail

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Van Strum Foundation

Sally & Moorhead Vermilye

Susan & herman Viola

William Vitale

Lorraine Vollberg

Virginia & William Voorhees

Jean & Don Wagner

Leanne Wagner & John Dent

Theresa & Michael Walden

E. K. Walker

George Wallace

Victoria & Michael Wallace

Peggy & Salvador Waller

Lynn & Joe Walsh

Ann & Donald Walter

Laura & James Ward

Joan & Joseph Warren James Washburn

Michelle & Chris Washburn

Grace & Frank Watkins

Ruth & David Way

Mary & Richard Weaver Alicia & Martin Weber

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Kate Whalen

hugh Whitaker

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heather & Shane Moore

Elizabeth Moose

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Ellen Rajacich

Mary Alice Rath & Bruce Burgess

An amazing tribute to the Chesapeake Bay! This is a “do not miss” part of any trip to St. Michaels. Plan to spend at least two hours here to see and experience everything. - Linda, Tripadvisor.com

Josephine & Wayne Shaner

Mary & Robert Sharp

Lisa & Timothy Shaw

Lolli Sherry & Craig Damon

Muriel & Enos Throop

Beverly & Richard Tilghman

Christopher Tilghman

Mary Tilghman

Clemens & Carol Zappe

Linda & Artur Zimmer

Joan & howard Zwemer

25 SPRING 2012 THE CHESAPEAKE LOG THE CHESAPEAKE LOG SPRING 2012 26
the Museum collection: Collections Manager Lynne Phillips holds up a very large fossilized oyster shell, estimated to be several million years old. Found by a donor in Rio Grande, it represents the kind of oyster the Chesapeake Bay had, and the size oysters used to reach.

Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum

P.O.Box 636 St. Michaels, MD 21663 cbmm.org • 410-745-2916

BUY sailing dinghies, cabin cruisers, canoes, crabbing skiffs, and more. Donated boats cost a fraction of buying a new or used boat at retail.

DONATE a boat and receive a tax deduction and help the Museum at the same time.

Contact Lad Mills, Boat Donation Program Manager 410-745-4942 • lmills@cbmm.org

Visit cbmm.org inventory subject to change. Check our website for current list of boats for sale.

A Star Spangled Night
SAVE THE DATE for the 15th Annual Boating Party Your next visit is on us! FREE GENERAL ADMISSION for two
Saturday, September 8, 2012 Cocktails • Dinner • Music • Dancing cbmm.org/boatingparty BUY A BOAT
Non-Profit Org. US Postage PAID Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum
on Navy Point, 1812-2012
people to the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels, Maryland Open 10am daily. Visit cbmm.org or call 410-745-2916 for info. Bring this coupon for general admission. Not reedemable for special events. Redeem at the Welcome Center. Ticket has no face value. Expires: December 31, 2012 The Chesapeake Log, Spring 2012
and help support the Museum’s BOAT DONATION PROGRAM
FORMULA 280 BR-2007 LIKE NEW: Only 42 hours. Lift kept, full canvas, radar and all electronics (refrig eration, heaters, anchor, windlass).
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