Just in time for its 75th anniversary, the Whaling Museum on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts, re-opened in June after an extensive two-year, US$ 12.8 million renovation. The museum is a must-visit site if you go to the island.
After all, Nantucket would be nothing if it hadn’t served a vital role as a whaling hub during the 18th and 19th centuries. For almost a century (from the mid-1700s to the late 1830s), the island was literally the whaling capital of the world, with as many as 150 ships making port on the tiny island.
Nantucket is about 80 miles (129 km) from Boston, Massachusetts, and it's only accessible only by boat or plane. On the island, time seems to have stood still. In fact, Nantucket is a National Historic District. Cars are discouraged, old-fashioned cottages remain intact and people greet you in the street with a friendly nod or hello.
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| In 1998, a 46-foot (14 m) sperm whale died on Nantucket's shores. The skeleton now hangs in the museum. |
A mere 14 miles (22.5 km) long by 3.5 miles (5.6 km) wide, about 40% of the island is conservation land, making hiking, biking and nature walks a pleasure. Year-round residents number about 12,000, but this number spikes to about 50,000 in the summer season, when many come to stay in their vacation homes.
While the island was once a whaling center, today tourism is its big business. Its hard-to-get-to status makes it a favorite of the wealthy and the famous, but day-trippers or weekenders enjoy the island as well.
The museum is the spot to get an overview of the importance of whaling to the island. Besides extensive updates and new interactive displays, the Whaling Museum is the proud home of the skeleton of a 46-foot (14 m) sperm whale that died on Nantucket’s shores in 1998. The skeleton hangs from the ceiling, allowing a 3D look from below, where the floor is painted to look like the ocean. An original whaling boat, smaller than anyone would think sane or safe to venture to sea in, sits below. On walls nearby harpoons and other tools of the trade are displayed — all seeming primitive and completely inadequate to the monumental task of bringing down a whale. Captain Ahab never seemed crazier.
Part of the museum is housed in a renovated 1847 candle factory, which has the only spermaceti (whale oil) beam press in the world still in its original home. It was used to process sperm whale oil into wax for candles and the press had been hidden by old construction. Now it is a proud centerpiece.
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