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    Friday, April 26, 2024

    Mystic Seaport Museum echoes centuries of the sea

    4/30/21 :: REGION :: STANDALONE :: Mystic Seaport Museum shipwright Tom Daniels works with members of the crew of the schooner Roseway, Rudy Schreiber, right, Colin Helpio, center, Cafferty Frattarelli, back, and Jack Mannke, not pictured, to bend a mast hoop Friday, April 30, 2021, at the Henry B. duPont Preservation Shipyard. The 2-foot diameter mast hoops, crafted from a 21-foot piece of white oak, steamed and then bent around a custom-built jig, are how the schooner's sails are fastened to the mast. Daniels is making about 30 hoops to replace worn hoops on the schooner. Roseway, operated by World Ocean School, has stopped in Mystic for several weeks of maintenance, including replacing a hull plank, re-caulking seams in the hull, and sanding and painting, in addition to crafting the new hoops. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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    There was a time when you could only buy XXXL T-shirts at Mystic Seaport because the place was officially called something like "Mystic Seaport — The Barnacle-Crusted Repositorium of All Things Fathoms, Boaty, Seafarin', Ocean-centric, Whaling Port-esque, (almost) Site of 'The Perfect Storm' and Place Where Peter Benchley Dreamed Up 'Jaws'." Anything smaller wouldn't fit the name on the shirt.

    Officially, the wordy name for a world-class nautical museum reflecting the area's briny history DID cover most bases. But it didn't exactly roll off the tongue. Now known a bit more efficiently, it's called Mystic Seaport Museum — and it is indeed one of the top tourist draws in all of New England. For all the right reasons.

    The family-happy facility replicates an entire 19th-century whaling village, and I've probably covered dozens of different events there over the years — from holiday theatricals and sea music festivals to continuous readings of the entire "Moby-Dick" and watching maritime carpenters work on replicas of whaling ships and the Amistad. It's an amazing, amazing place.

    Mystic Seaport Museum, 76 Greenmanville Ave., Mystic; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily; $27, $25 seniors, $23 youth (13-17), $19 child (4-12), free 3 and under; 860-572-0711, www,mysticseaport.org.

    08/01/2021:: REGION :: STANDALONE :: Members of the Mystic Seaport Museum Talemakers, from left, Molly McElroy, Olivia Rusk and Hunter Bustamante act out a scene from "Moby-Dick in Minutes" during an event at the Mystic Seaport Museum on Sunday, August 1, 2021. The museum's annual event was in honor of the book's author, Herman Melville, 202nd birthday. The event featured readings of select chapters of the novel as well as performances and a talk by Melville scholar Mary K. Bercaw-Edwards on "Melville, Moby-Dick, and the Morgan." (Sarah Gordon/The Day)
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    Visitors to Mystic Seaport Museum take in the sights Friday, Aug. 20, 2021, during the annual Woodenboat Show and the Antique and Marine Engine Exposition. (Sean D. Elliot/The Day)
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