Binnenvaartmuseum

Binnenvaartmuseum

Binnenvaartmuseum

Maritime museum in Dordrecht, Netherlands


Binnenvaartmuseum ('Inland Shipping Museum') is a floating museum in Dordrecht, South Holland, Netherlands, on the Wantij [nl] waterway near the former shipyard De Biesbosch.[1]

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Description

The museum is run by Vereniging De Binnenvaart (established 1990),[lower-alpha 1] which also runs the shore-based Binnenvaartcentrum. Binnenvaartcentrum collects documents relating to inland shipping in the Netherlands and elsewhere.[2]

The museum is centered around René Siegfried, a decommissioned towboat (Dutch: duwboot, a type of working vessel used on inland waterways). René Siegfried was built in 1963 by De Biesbosch for the Strasbourg-based Compagnie française de navigation rhénane [fr] (CNFR). In its day, it was one of the most powerful towboats on the River Rhine (which is a major European waterway). It had a crew of 11, later reduced to 9. In 1989, it was taken out of service because of overcapacity in the industry. It was saved from being scrapped, its engines were removed, and it was converted into a floating restaurant containing items of historical interest, moored on the Rhine at Nierstein in southern Germany. In 2004, it was put on the market for sale; and the vereniging bought it, took it to the Netherlands, and refurbished it as a museum. It has been added to the Dutch Nationaal Register Mobiel Erfgoed ('National Register of Moveable Heritage').[3][4][5]

In 2008, the vereniging acquired a decommissioned Rhine LASH carrier (registration number CG S 6013), and installed it as an extension to the museum.[6] It is an example of one type of unpowered cargo carrier which René Siegfried would have pushed. In 2018, the vereniging acquired the French-built riverboat Marot,[lower-alpha 2] and added it to their collection.[7] Marot is a surviving example of a Fransemotor ('French motor boat'), one of several such boats built during the postwar years under the Marshall Plan to help European recovery. It was fitted out in 1953 at De Biesbosch as a Rhine working riverboat. It was in service for 65 years (in 1970, it was renamed Jan van Voorst), and was retired in 2018.[8][9]

The museum is staffed by volunteers (and as a consequence opening times are limited), and entry is free. In addition to its displays of model ships, memorabilia, and the like, the museum has put on several series of themed exhibitions. A centrepiece of the permanent display is the afterpart of the hull of De Jonge Jacob, a wooden cargo carrier (a hektjalk [nl]) which wrecked in the Dordtsche Kil near Dordrecht in 1858, and which was partially raised in 2006.[10][11]

Pictures

Notes

  1. A vereniging (nl) is a type of legally-constituted organisation defined in Dutch law, with similar legal rights and responsibilities to other such types of associations and companies, but with its own kind of internal structure, which allows membership both of individuals and of corporate bodies.
  2. It has been said that Marot was named after a French resistance fighter who had that name or who had used it as a nom de guerre.[7] If so, that person is not easy to identify.

References

  1. "Binnenvaartmuseum". debinnenvaart.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  2. "De binnenvaart is zo bijzonder!". Papendrechts Nieuwsblad (in Dutch). 4 May 2017. Archived from the original on 24 March 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  3. Hubens, Jos. "Duwboot René Siegfried". Nationaal Register Mobiel Erfgoed (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  4. "Voormalige Franse duwboot van Nierstein naar Dordrecht". Vaart! (in Dutch). 18 September 2004. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  5. "Rene Siegfried (1820005)". binnenvaart.eu (in Dutch). Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  6. "LASHbak voor Rene Siegfried arriveert in Dordt". Vaart! (in Dutch). 4 June 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  7. "Nieuw oud schip voor binnenvaartmuseum". RTV Dordrecht [nl] (in Dutch). 16 July 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  8. "Marot centrale schip in Binnenvaartmuseum". scheepvaartkrant.nl (in Dutch). 16 July 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  9. Koster, Peter (20 July 2018). "Zutphense Marot wordt museumschip in Dordrecht". De Stentor (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  10. "Rijkswaterstaat licht 19e-eeuws scheepswrak". NU.nl (in Dutch). 20 December 2006. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  11. "Scheepswrak De Jacob". archeologiedordrecht.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 March 2019.

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