Monday, June 2, 2014

St Michaels MD, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum

We were serenaded last night by a bluesy, acoustisical band, at one of the restaurants here in the harbor... we couldn't really hear the lyrics but the music was "just right" for our mood.  This morning we spent the day seeing the town of St Michaels which was surprisingly smaller than I thought it would be (based on the size of the harbors here and the "hopping" atmosphere on a Sunday afternoon).  I believe the population is something like 1200! (probably not counting boaters and vacationers)

This Monday morning, the town was quiet and mostly deserted.  We strolled the shopping streets and then went to the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum which is touted as the best museum on the Bay.  I think that is arguable, as we both like the Calvert County Museum in Solomons better.  I do think there are more actual boats on exhibit here, but, the other museum had more variety of things to look at.

The price of admission was worth it though, just to see Rob's face as we walked into an exhibit about recreational boating on the bay.  We came face to face with a 1952 Owens cruiser which you could walk through and examine.  Rob's family had a 1958 Owens and said it was very much like this one (only much newer and nicer).  The museum also had an exhibit of tugboats and quite an interesting exhibit about oystering and crabbing.




The town is also known as once being the slave home of Frederick Douglas and we saw his sister's home which is preserved right on the museum grounds.  He came back here during reconstruction and was a county marshal.

My favorite part of St Michaels are the church bells of Christ Church (established 1672) which chime the hour and, at the Angelus, they play a couple of hymns.  Like everything else these days, the carillon is electonically controlled.

St Michaels is known as "the town that fooled the British".  In 1813, when the British moved up the Chesapeake, they targeted St Michaels one evening.  However, the townspeople had moved lanterns up in the trees outside of the town and had dimmed all the lights in their homes and businesses.  When the Brits attacked, they overshot the town.





St Michaels MD

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