Independence Seaport Museum

History & Heritage

A place where pirate lore and intriguing maritime history come to life for student groups

The Independence Seaport Museum, located along the Delaware River in Philadelphia, offers an immersive experience through its historic ships, Cruiser Olympia and Submarine Becuna, and award-winning exhibitions exploring the region’s maritime history, science and cultural communities. Groups can board the ships to experience life at sea, while exhibits like Patriots & Pirates, River Alive!, At the Water’s Edge, and Tides of Freedom provide insights into the Navy’s founding, the Delaware River’s significance and the African-American struggle for freedom.

Leisure Group Travel Museum Guide

Independence Seaport Museum

Independence Seaport Museum

Discover the Depths of Philadelphia’s Maritime Heritage

The museum, founded in 1960 by J. Welles Henderson, was established as the Philadelphia Maritime Museum and opened its doors in 1961. Despite Philadelphia’s long history of maritime significance to the country since the days of William Penn, there had been no dedicated museum focusing on the topic until then.  Henderson’s vision was for the museum to collect, display, preserve and study the port of Philadelphia’s maritime history and development for charitable, scientific, literary and educational purposes. From its inception, the museum was enthusiastically received by the community and continues to this day.  In 2021, USA Today’s readers voted Independence Seaport Museum as one of the Top Ten Best History Museums of the year.

The museum organized its first major art exhibition in 1966 to celebrate its fifth anniversary featuring works by Thomas Birch and other artists whose work focused on the Delaware Valley’s maritime tradition. Critics hailed the exhibition as “an important and outstanding contribution to American maritime art.” Numerous acclaimed exhibitions, lectures and other programs have been a highlight of the museum’s tradition ever since.

Charting the Course of History Along the Delaware River

As the museum’s visitation, membership, programming and educational opportunities expanded, so, too, did its needs for physical space. In December 1974, it moved to a new, substantially larger space on Chestnut Street. Five years later, the Philadelphia Maritime Museum became only the sixth museum in Philadelphia to receive accreditation from the American Association of Museums (now the American Alliance of Museums), a distinction it continues to hold to the present. Spurred by continued growth, the museum moved to its current location along the Delaware River at Penn’s Landing in 1995 and also changed its name, as it remains known today, to Independence Seaport Museum.

Navigating Through History: A Journey on Cruiser Olympia and Submarine Becuna

Over the years, the museum has actively acquired artifacts and works of art that support its mission. Today, the museum’s collections include not only more than 10,000 objects and one million documents but also the historic Cruiser Olympia (the oldest floating steel warship in the world) and the Submarine Becuna from the World War II-era. Among the collection’s other treasures are Benjamin Franklin’s chart showing his published discovery of the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic, the signal book used by Admiral Howe to give instructions to his fleet as they sailed up the Delaware River seeking to engage former colonists in November 1777, Captain Vernon Gridley’s sea chest used on Olympia during the Battle of Manila Bay in the Spanish American War that descended from the original owner’s family and the first-class passenger list for Titanic.

The Seaport Boat Shop, opened in 1981 and is dedicated to the skills and traditions of wooden boat building and sailing in the Delaware Valley and the New Jersey shore, is another educational aspect of the Independence Seaport Museum where visitors can learn about how watercraft work and are constructed.

For more information about Independence Seaport Museum, be sure to Visit their Website and Subscribe to Student Travel Planning for more travel ideas and tips

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