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The Key West Shipwreck Museum (formerly Shipwreck Historeum) is located in Key West, Florida, United States. It combines actors, films and actual artifacts to tell the story of 400 years of shipwreck salvage in the Florida Keys. The museum itself is a re-creation of a 19th-century warehouse built by wrecker tycoon Asa Tift.
Key West Shipwreck Historeum Museum: Florida: Key West: Lighthouse Museum & Keepers Quarters Museum: Florida: Key West: Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Museum: Florida: Fort Lauderdale: Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale Museum: Florida: Panama City Beach: Man in the Sea Museum: Archived 2008-08-27 at the Wayback Machine: Florida: Pensacola
Ship disassembled with intent to remove it to a lake environment; parts are in deteriorating condition. The landmark designation was withdrawn on July 27, 2011. [4] 3: Wapama (steam schooner) California Dry rot and general deterioration of the hull resulted in the ship being dismantled in 2013. The landmark designation was withdrawn on February ...
A sonar image of the shipwreck of the Soviet Navy ship Virsaitis in Estonian waters Johan Christian Dahl: Shipwreck on the Coast of Norway, 1832 Bow of RMS Titanic, first discovered in 1985 Wreck of Costa Concordia. A shipwreck is the wreckage of a ship that is located either beached on land or sunken to the bottom of a body of water ...
Isaac Allerton was a 594-ton American merchant ship that sank in a hurricane 15 nautical miles (28 km) east-southeast of Key West in the Florida Keys near the Saddlebunch Keys on August 28, 1856. History
Key West Shipwreck Historeum Museum: Key West: Monroe Florida Keys: Maritime Combines actors, films and actual artifacts from the 1985 rediscovery of the wrecked vessel Isaac Allerton: Kingsley Plantation: Jacksonville: Duval Northeast Open air Operated by U.S. National Park Service, remains of an early 19th-century plantation with slave houses
But its three-masted timber sailing ship Endurance fell victim to the treacherous Weddell Sea, becoming ensnared in pack ice in January 1915. It was progressively crushed and sank 10 months later.
As the storm continued to rage, the ship came apart, eventually killing 46 people. The wreck of the Algoma was the worst loss of life in the history of Lake Superior shipping. [5] 2: Amboy and George Spencer Shipwreck Sites: Amboy and George Spencer Shipwreck Sites: April 14, 1994 : Lake Superior shore about a mile southwest of Sugar Loaf Cove [6