Harbor History Museum

The Harbor History Museum is a regional maritime and history museum in Gig Harbor, Washington. It hosts exhibits on regional culture and history, and Midway Schoolhouse, a one-room schoolhouse built in 1893 and moved to the museum's grounds in 2009.[1][2][3][4] The museum won the Washington Museum Association annual Award of Project Excellence for an ongoing living history program called Midway Pioneer School Experience that leads grade-school students through a day in an early 20th century classroom.[5]

Harbor History Museum
Established2010
Location4121 Harborview Drive
Gig Harbor, Washington
Coordinates47.3375°N 122.5931°W / 47.3375; -122.5931
TypeHistory and maritime
DirectorStephanie Lile
OwnerGig Harbor Peninsula Historical Society
Websiteharborhistorymuseum.org

The museum acquired its current 14,500-square-foot (1,350 m2)[3] location on downtown Gig Harbor's Harborview Drive with a $1.5 million gift from a Gig Harbor family. The museum opened there in 2010.[6]

In late 2014, the museum board announced it would host more local cultural events including monthly music concerts in 2015.

The Shenandoah Restoration Project

The museum is restoring a wooden fishing boat, the Shenandoah, that worked the San Juan Islands from 1925 until it was donated to the museum in 2000.[2][7]

References

  1. Charlee Glock-Jackson (November 19, 2013), "Midway School in Gig Harbor celebrates 120 years", Kitsap Sun
  2. Terry Richard (May 29, 2014), "Gig Harbor salty getaway across Puget Sound via Tacoma Narrows Bridge", The Daily Oregonian
  3. Nonprofit directory: GIG HARBOR PENINSULA HISTORICAL SOCIETY- HARBOR HISTORY MUSEUM, Greater Tacoma Community Foundation, archived from the original on 2015-06-13, retrieved 2015-06-11
  4. Kathryn True (October 13, 2010), "Gig Harbor boosts its maritime pedigree with new museum and more", The Seattle Times
  5. "Midway School at History Museum earns state honor", Kitsap Sun, May 1, 2013
  6. Karen Miller (May 20, 2015), "Longtime Peninsula Historical Society volunteer loved community, history", Kitsap Sun
  7. "Museum volunteer turns Shenandoah restoration wood scraps into bowls, bread boards", Kitsap Sun, April 7, 2015



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