Ramsgate Maritime Museum

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Ramsgate Maritime Museum
Ramsgate Maritime Museum.jpg
Ramsgate Maritime Museum
Kent UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location within Kent
Location Ramsgate, Kent, England
Coordinates 51°19′53″N1°25′21″E / 51.3315°N 1.4224°E / 51.3315; 1.4224 Coordinates: 51°19′53″N1°25′21″E / 51.3315°N 1.4224°E / 51.3315; 1.4224
Type Maritime Museum
Public transit access Ramsgate railway station
Website ramsgatemaritimemuseum.org
Cervia, a steam tug. Sunday 4 April 2010, Steam Tug Cervia.JPG
Cervia, a steam tug.
Sundowner, a Dunkirk little ship. Sunday 4 April, Ramsgate, Dunkirk Little ship Sundowner.JPG
Sundowner, a Dunkirk little ship.

Ramsgate Maritime Museum is a maritime museum in Ramsgate, Kent, England, that describes the maritime history of East Kent. The museum is situated in the Clock House on the quayside of the Royal Harbour at Ramsgate.

Contents

Ramsgate Maritime Museum is run by the Steam Museum Trust, a registered charity. [1]

Buildings

The museum is housed in buildings leased from Thanet District Council.

The Clock House was built in 1817 by Benjamen Wyatt and George Louch. It was later altered by John Rennie and has now been designated as a Grade II* listed building. [2]

Exhibits

There are four permanent galleries covering the development of the harbour, navigation, fishing, lifeboats and shipwrecks. A fifth exhibition space houses a 17th-century 32-pounder demi-cannon raised from the wreck of HMS Stirling Castle. A number of artefacts come from the nearby Goodwin Sands which is responsible for numerous shipwrecks.

Exhibits include two museum ships: the 1946 steam tug Cervia and Sundowner, a 1912 Dunkirk little ship.

The museum reopened on 5 May 2012, having been closed for several years, and plans are afoot to completely revamp the Clock House building and Pier Yard surrounds.

See also

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References

  1. "The Steam Museum Trust, registered charity no. 1129376". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  2. "Clock House". historicengland.org.uk. English Heritage . Retrieved 4 April 2010.