Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Historic Port of Washington Museum Project in Washington, NC on the Pamlico River.

I visited the special little town of Washington, NC recently and was inspired by the beauty and history that abounds in this quaint little town.  From the boardwalk along the water front that allows you to view sailboats and small islands, to the funky full of fun antique shops and delicious restaurants  "Down On Main Street" is very popular and rightfully so .

I normally write my own piece discussing the subject , but chose to use Billie-Jean E. Mallison's description I asked her to provide.  Please take time to visit Washington , NC and the newest museum you will be glad you did.

 Historic Port of Washington Project in Washington, NC on the Pamlico River.
Some of our staff enjoyed meeting talented Lorri Lee Keck-Chambers and charming male companion and photographer, when they visited recently. We are an all-volunteer organization made up of amateur local historians and we love to chat oral history with locals and also visitors from out of town who may drop in.
The Historic Port of Washington Museum is about “old but fun” like the little town of Washington, NC where it is located in the heart of its historic downtown which fronts the Pamlico River. We are a small private museum, new, just getting started, and we celebrate the Maritime history of Washington; address is 132 S. Market, between Main and Water Sts. above the Chamber of Commerce which sets almost on the water. Washington was the first town named for General George Washington during the Revolutionary War, was settled at the western edge of navigable waters if sailing west from the Outer Banks of NC through the Pamlico Sound. Museum features a 4 ft x 10 ft painted mural of the Washington waterfront circa 1880-1920, including depictions of local Fowle family shipping empire’s warehouses and sailing ships that plied a circuit between the West Indies, Washington NC, and Europe, as well as “Sharpie” sailing schooners the work boats of the Pamlico, and the Atlantic Coastal Railway terminal, and steamboats made or repaired in Washington NC shipyards.
April 2016 will feature a Lifestyles Exhibit--Entering the 20th Century in Washington, NC, re: what life was like at an extremely prosperous time for the port of Washington; Exhibits depict everything from the beginning of public education in North Carolina in Washington as well as the beginning of the “Jim Crow” era, to ladies and home fashions and a manikin costumed in a  1910 empire waist dress, to what people were reading and wondering about, and the new progressive amenities the town boasted like telephone, electricity, running water, and who had the first automobile. We also plan a steam engine demonstration at the last of April.
www.facebook.com/historicportofwashington for events and newsletter posted online. 

We are open Saturdays, 9:30 am – 1:30 pm.
Washington is a lovely place to walk on the boardwalk and look at the river and boats and lovely homes on East and West Main Street, as Lorri Lee Keck-Chambers told us when she visited the Museum and Project.
Washington also has a Civil War history and a new Underground Railroad Museum which highlights the port’s important position in the circuit African American slaves took in seeking to escape.
Billie-Jean E. Mallison
Volunteer Coordinator
Historic Port of Washington Project
2/29/16







 















 
 
 

Look for this lady in your travels about town, and don't forget to visit the Estuarium while you are there.   North Carolina Estuarium

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