Summer's best laid plans : Custom House Maritimes
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Our monthly news of of activities at the Custom House is now found at the bottom of this page.
We have changed our method of keeping you up-to-date with the current goings-on at the Custom House by posting events, as they happen, on our three Facebook pages.
Please take a look: Custom House Maritime Museum,  New London Harbor Light,  Race Rock Light StationSentinels on the Sound - 2014 Lighthouse events.

See a photo diary of what happened at the Custom House prior to our Facebook pages in July 2012, June 2012,  May 2012,    April 2012, March 2012,     February 2012,    January 2012,    December 2011,  November 2011, at the One Big Table Community Dinner with Molly O'Neill,   in October 2011,   September 2011,    August 2011,    July 2011,    June 2011,     May 2011,   April 2011,  March 2011,     January-February 2011,     November-December  2010,   
with our new 3-year program with the NL Public Schools Lighthouse Kids,   
in  September-October 2010,    August 2010,  at summer festivities in June-July 2010,    at special Amistad events in April-May 2010,   
on our trip to the UN with the Amistad exhibition,   
in January-March 2010,  in 2009,  & in 2008

Learn how the Whale Tail fountain was made! 

See our first Sentinels on the Sound: Celebration of New London's Lighthouses

Attend One Big Table, our Community Heritage Dinner with NYT writer Molly O'Neill.

Read our Winter 2011 and Fall 2010 newsletters.

The New London Maritime Society/Custom House Maritime Museum is made possible by generous grants from The Chester Kitchings Family Foundation, the Connecticut Humanities Council, Dominion Foundation, the Bodenwein Public Benevolent Foundation, the Frank Loomis Palmer Fund, the Community Foundation of Eastern CT, &  and by the work of dedicated volunteers, members & friends. 


HAPPY 250th NEW LONDON HARBOR LIGHT!

Summer's best laid plans

by Susan on 10/10/15

You can’t always tell... We anticipated it would take four-to-five-years to raise the funds to repaint Harbor Light. In fact, 80% of what we needed—approximately $450,000—came in one fell swoop less than 24 hours after the campaign was announced: a single call from Lisa Gorman at
the Carpenters Union offered us carpenters, painters, and enough scaffolding to surmount the tip of the lighthouse lantern. You
—the community— followed suite with $165,000 in donations.
It was a fantastic surprise, and again we say: thank you.
The entire restoration, from announcing the campaign to completing the work, took just 18 months, from June 2013 to September 2014.
At the same time, we used Super Storm Sandy/FEMA funding to rebuild storm-damaged masonry at Harbor Lighthouse. Our property survey revealed we had room for a three-foot wide, grade-level sidewalk
across the ledge along our north border allowing us direct access to the lighthouse, entirely on our own property; so we started building. This should have taken two months to complete, but we were stopped
in our tracks. Here we now are, 18 months on, mired in a lawsuit, having had to cancel our fall Open House.
On the brighter side, we benefitted from two unanticipated ‘gifts’ this summer , as well as one we’d worked towards for many months. First, the
Amistad moored here, in New London, from May through September. This visit allowed Custom House volunteers to work with historian Marcus
Rediker to revamp our telling of the story and revitalize our work with school groups. A second gift was that we briefly became local host to
el Galeon, a massive, Spanish reproduction 16th-c. galleon.
Working with Barbara Neff and New London Port Authority, we sold tickets for visitors to board the ship and Partied with the Pirates,
raising a respectable bonus of $1,000 to support the museum.
The much-anticipated transfer of ownership of Ledge Lighthouse to New London Maritime Society was our third gift this summer—and true cause for celebration.
This was not the summer we’d anticipated. It was a true mix of good and bad. But summer’s over and looking beyond the immediate issues, we need to rethink what the Maritime Society can do with its now enviable assets. We have a terrific museum, excellent programming and partners, three lighthouses (and as co-plaintiffs in the suit to prevent the sale of Plum Island, we may be considering a 4th). We welcome your suggestions. It’s time to take a fresh look around us and re-envision whatour brightest future might be.

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