National Coast Guard Museum

Coordinates: 41°21′16″N 72°05′32″W / 41.354544°N 72.092218°W / 41.354544; -72.092218
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Coast Guard Museum is a museum planned for construction in New London, Connecticut, an historic seaport at the mouth of the Thames River on Long Island Sound that is the home of the United States Coast Guard Academy.

The Coast Guard Museum Association, which has been working to create the museum since 2001, had hoped to break ground on the building in 2018.[1] However, in 2019 David Collins, staff writer for the New London Day, wrote that the museum, "keeps slipping deadlines, year by year, and it's beginning to look like it could sink hopelessly underwater before any rescue is mobilized."[2]

Construction of the museum officially started August 19, 2022 with a "keel laying ceremony".[3]

The Coast Guard and the Space Force are the only two out of America's six service branches that do not yet have a dedicated museum; the Army, Marines, Navy and Air Force already have museums.[1]

The museum has been given a site on the Thames River by the City of New London.[1]

The museum association has already received $50 million in federal funding and raised $44 million of a $50 million goal. The state has pledged $20 million toward construction of a pedestrian bridge that will link the waterfront and the museum with the Water Street parking garage.[4]

The proposed five or six-story, 80,000 square feet building will include an outdoor concert pavilion where the United States Coast Guard Band and other groups can give concerts.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Woolhouse, Megan (16 August 2017). "Plan for new Coast Guard museum in Conn. gains momentum". Boston Globe. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  2. ^ Collier, David (30 March 2019). "If New London turned a corner while run by Passero, I missed it". New London Day. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  3. ^ "Commandant to officiate keel-laying ceremony for the National Coast Guard Museum". United States Coast Guard. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  4. ^ Smith, Greg (December 7, 2023). "Coast Guard highlights national museum project's oldest artifact". The Day. Retrieved 10 January 2024.

External links[edit]

41°21′16″N 72°05′32″W / 41.354544°N 72.092218°W / 41.354544; -72.092218