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  2. New Bedford Whaling Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Bedford_Whaling_Museum

    The New Bedford Whaling Museum is a museum in New Bedford, Massachusetts, United States that focuses on the history, science, art, and culture of the international whaling industry, and the colonial region of Old Dartmouth (now the city of New Bedford and towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, and Westport) in the South Coast of Massachusetts.

  3. Sag Harbor Whaling Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sag_Harbor_Whaling_Museum

    The museum is filled with the equipment of the whaling ships: guns, try pots, flensing knives, blubber spades, figureheads, and a large collection of scrimshaw carvings etched on whale ivory. In the Harpoon Room, harpoons line the walls along with whale vertebrae and shipbuilding tools.

  4. Charles W. Morgan (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_W._Morgan_(ship)

    Charles W. Morgan has served as a museum ship since the 1940s and is now an exhibit at the Mystic Seaport museum in Mystic, Connecticut. She is the world's oldest surviving (non-wrecked) merchant vessel, the only surviving wooden whaling ship from the 19th century American merchant fleet (of an estimated 2,700 built), [ 7 ] and second to USS ...

  5. Lagoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagoda

    The Lagoda in the Bourne Building of the New Bedford Whaling Museum. The Lagoda is a half-scale model of the whaling ship Lagoda, located at the New Bedford Whaling Museum. The original ship was built in 1826, converted to a whaling ship in 1841, and broken up in 1899. The model was commissioned in 1916 and is the world's largest whaling ship ...

  6. History of whaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_whaling

    A Whale Brought alongside a Ship, by the Scottish John Heaviside Clark, 1814. Flensing is in process. Photo of a whaling station in Spitsbergen, Norway, 1907. This article discusses the history of whaling from prehistoric times up to the commencement of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium on commercial whaling in 1986. Whaling ...

  7. The Whaling Museum & Education Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Whaling_Museum...

    The majority of the Museum's collections were donated over time, starting as a community repository from the Museum's founding in 1936. Totaling 6,000 pieces, most pieces speak to the 19th century whaling industry, specifically Long Island whaling, as well as the local history of Cold Spring Harbor and its growth as a maritime port.

  8. List of maritime museums in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_maritime_museums...

    List of maritime museums in the United States is a sortable list of American museums which display objects related to ships and water travel. Many of these maritime museums have museum ships in their collections. Member museums of the Council of American Maritime Museums (CAMM) are indicated in the last column.

  9. Whaler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whaler

    The term whaler is mostly historic. A handful of nations continue with industrial whaling, and one, Japan, still dedicates a single factory ship for the industry. The vessels used by aboriginal whaling communities are much smaller and are used for various purposes over the course of the year.