THE FORMER Grand Banks fishing schooner Sherman Zwicker edges up to the dock at the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath in this June 28, 2011, file photo. The Zwicker is scheduled to return to the museum in late June and will become part of the museum’s 50th anniversary exhibit until October.

THE FORMER Grand Banks fishing schooner Sherman Zwicker edges up to the dock at the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath in this June 28, 2011, file photo. The Zwicker is scheduled to return to the museum in late June and will become part of the museum’s 50th anniversary exhibit until October.

Maine Maritime Museum celebrates its 50th anniversary this year.

The museum will host visits by four tall ships, offer a special openhouse weekend, mount two new exhibits in the museum and two other exhibits off site (one in Portland, one in Rockland). The museum also will conduct a special event when DDG-112, the future USS Michael Murphy, departs Bath to join the Navy fleet.

To mark the anniversary, the museum plans to recognize its founders and supporters with a special luncheon, and crown it all with a promotion of maritime experiences throughout the state called, “Experience Maritime Maine!”

“Yes, it’s going to be a busy, hectic and demanding time for our staff and volunteers,” Amy Lent, executive director of the museum, said in a release. “But an institution only turns 50 once, so everyone’s ready to pitch in to make it the biggest and best celebration possible.”

The slate of events begins this weekend when the museum’s latest exhibit about the War of 1812 opens on Saturday.

“Artifacts and original archival documents from four Maine museums and numerous private collections have been brought together to present the story of how this often overlooked war impacted Maine,” the release states.

“We focused our efforts on gathering original artifacts and documents for the exhibit so that visitors would get a feel for how the people of Maine viewed the war at that time, not how some later generation envisioned it might have been,” Chris Hall, curator of exhibits, said in the release. “Our goal is that people will come away with a very good idea of what it must have been like to have lived in Maine during that period.”

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Two off-site exhibits curated by the museum also are part of the anniversary celebration.

“The Sea Within Us: Iconically Maritime in Fashion and Design” will open on July 20 at the Portland Public Library on Congress Street. The exhibit explores the connections between historical maritime culture and imagery and modern objects and everyday aspects of our present-day culture. The exhibit will remain on view through June 14, 2013.

Another off-site exhibit is already in place. In April, Maine Maritime Museum opened an exhibit in Rockland at The Apprenticeshop, a school for traditional boatbuilding and seamanship. “Honing the Edge, The Apprenticeshop at 40,” tells the story of the organization’s 1972 genesis on the grounds of the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath. The exhibit will remain on view in Rockland throughout the year.

Opportunities to learn more about the life of a sailor during the War of 1812 and the era of sail abound as the museum hosts four tall ship visits in 2012.

Two of the four tall ships that will call during the summer arrive in June. Fame, a full-scale replica of a War of 1812 privateer, will be open to visitors on June 23 and 24.

The Arctic schooner Bowdoin, the historic vessel of the famed Arctic explorer Donald MacMillan, arrives the following weekend and will be open June 29 and 30. Visiting both of these vessels will be free with paid museum admission.

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The Grand Banks fishing schooner Sherman Zwicker, which docks at the museum during the summer months, will also arrive in late June and be a part of the museum’s ongoing exhibits until late October.

On July 14 and 15, the 177- foot barkentine Gazela Primeiro will be dockside and open to visitors. Built in Portugal and launched in 1901, the three-masted vessel crossed the Atlantic each summer until 1969 with the Portuguese White Fleet to fish in the Grand Banks. The boarding fee for Gazela Primeiro will be $5 per person.

Pride of Baltimore II, a reproduction of an 1812-era topsail schooner often called a Baltimore Clipper, will be docked at the museum and open to the public from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Aug. 11 and 12. Boarding passes will be $5 per person. Pride also will host two-hour river sails for a limited number of passengers. The cost to join the sail is $55 for adults and $30 for children. Thanks to a grant from the Maine Office of Tourism, the Museum has organized and conducted a promotion that highlights the many maritime related activities, events and experiences throughout Maine in the summer of 2012. “Experience Maritime Maine!” encourages visitor from throughout New England to visit Maine and join in the celebration of the state’s maritime heritage.

On the afternoon of Sept. 5, the museum will host a Sail- Away celebration as DDG-112, the future USS Michael Murphy, departs her berth at Bath Iron Works for the last time as she heads down the Kennebec River on her way to join the Navy’s Pacific Fleet. The celebration will include a musical salute, remarks by several individuals associated with the ship’s construction and a final cannon salute as she passes the museum. The event is free and open to the public.

The museum will hold its “anniversary party” on Sept. 15 and 16 with an open house weekend for all. Admission will be free both days, there will be special events and demonstrations, reduced fee river cruises, musical performances and other activities are being planned.

At an October luncheon, the museum will honor and recognize its founders and key persons who contributed significantly to its success over the years.

The museum traces its roots back to 1962 when seven local residents came together to publish a history of the shipbuilding industry in the Bath area.

“That single-purpose beginning quickly evolved to a much greater mission as dozens, then hundreds, of local citizens and residents throughout the state interested in preserving Maine’s maritime heritage stepped forward, contributing their family heirlooms, financial support and/or their time and talents,” the release states.

The culminating activity in the museum’s year of celebration will be a new exhibit featuring the most important, most iconic and perhaps the most meaningful artifacts that have been added to its collections over the past 50 years. “Full Ahead at Fifty: 50 Years of Collecting at Maine Maritime Museum” will open on Nov. 10, precisely 50 years from the date of the museum’s founding.


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