The combination
of its collections, its setup, its location
and its staff makes the Hudson River Maritime
Heritage Museum one of the must go locations
in the Hudson Valley. The museum is about the
ships and boats of the river, the uses of the
river, the life of the river and the history
of the river, all rolled up and presented in
an open, interesting and kid friendly way.
Located at the Rondout
in Kingston, the atmosphere of the area is fun
and jovial, almost a fair every day of the year.
The Rondout is the old port of Kingston now
with its streets lined with excellent restaurants
and gift and curiosity shops. The main marina
for Kingston is down in the Rondout making sure
that at all times of the year there will be
boats of every description tied up at the docks
and slips. Historic trolleys run up and down
Broadway in season past the museum and next
door the cruise boat Rip Van Winkle takes on
and disembarks its passengers. Just up the road
the Kingston Visitor Center gives out information
and shows exhibitions on the history of the
Rondout.
The area is alive
with activity, people are always walking about
and just being in the Rondout is fun. Walking
into the Maritime Museum just builds pleasure
on top of pleasure. They have a collection of
prints and paintings of historic boats that
have plied the waters of the Hudson. Deeper
inside the museum is a vast room filled to near
overflowing with artifacts from some of the
great steamships of the Hudson River. Small
boats are tucked between giant propellers, ephemera
is stacked between life jackets. It's a fun
and friendly exploration into the world of the
river and its history.
At the museum you
can buy an inexpensive ticket and board a launch
that will take you out to the Rondout Lighthouse
in the river where the Rondout Creek joins the
mighty Hudson. It's a pleasurable short ride
out past the remnants of commercial life on
the river. Out at the lighthouse informed guides
take you into the lighthouse past evolving restorations
and up to the top of the tower itself. From
this vantage point you can gaze out across the
harbor, the river and the Rondout marching up
the hill to Kingston.
While visiting the
museum and lighthouse remember that the harbor
at the Rondout was one of the most important
trade harbors in the country. The D&H Canal
met the Hudson River at the Rondout making this
harbor the transit point of the Pennsylvania
coal that powered New York City, the transit
point of the cement industry that built New
York City and the transit point of goods and
produce from the interior of the country that
fed and sustained New York City. In its day
the Rondout was one of the busiest ports in
America providing the backbone of the colossus
of New York.
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