Updated: 2/7/2012 
Rock Hall Museum
Rock Hall, Maryland
Description
Working on the Water

In Rock Hall, all roads lead to water. And all water eventually flows to one of the world's greatest estuaries, the Chesapeake Bay. With the advantage of easy access to the Chester River, Gray's Inn Creek and Swan Creek as well as a direct link to the Bay from Rock Hall Harbor, water-related occupations shaped Rock Hall's economic and cultural development from the very beginning…and continue to do so today. In the early years, the Bay served as a commercial link with more populated areas.

Rock Hall served as a shipping point for seafood and agricultural products. Fishing and seafood processing were for years Rock Hall's largest industry, providing an economic base for Main Street commerce and community lifestyle. As commercial fishery interests declined in more recent years, recreational interests filled the void. Today, Rock Hall serves as one of the larger sailing and charter boat fishing centers on the Eastern Shore. The Rock Hall Museum collection includes representative examples of equipment used in the early years of harvesting the Bay, such as oyster bed charts, ice buoys, a drift net lantern, a hand-winder mast and boom oyster rig with patent tongs, a shucking box, a grass shrimp net and a number of other commonly used tools.

Carving for Sport and Profit

While guns and dogs played a critical role in Rock Hall's preoccupation with hunting waterfowl, nothing was quite so important as a good string of working decoys. Hand-carved at first, working decoys eventually evolved into plastic mass-produced lures in more recent years, adding significant worth to the surviving early crafted models. Rock Hall still has some decorative carvers. But serious collectors know well the names of the Rock Hall masters: John B. Glenn, August Heinefield, Captain Jesse Urie, Clifton Simns and Roger Urie. The Rock Hall Museum features a re-created carving shop, featuring original tools, furnishings, patterns and partially carved decoys donated by the Urie family. The Museum also maintains off-site a hand-built duplicating lathe from the shop of Roger Urie. Special loaned exhibits too are a periodic feature, announced in advance on this website's Homepage Bulletin Board.

From Workboats to Steamboats

If you grew up in Rock Hall 75 years ago, your boat was a tool…not a toy. As essential as a strong back, a sturdy skiff or bateau put food on the table and cash in the pocket. And if you had some cash for a trip to Baltimore, chances are you departed by steamboat from a wharf at 'Gratitude,' the neighborhood at the terminus of Route 20 believed named after the steamboat that called there. Most of the good old wooden workboats are gone. Some can be found beached in the marsh or woods. Yet, there are more boats than ever in Rock Hall today, but most of them are called "yachts." The Rock Hall Museum collection includes 33 locally handcrafted models of the wooden boats commonly built here and used here by watermen, along with a photo collection of Chesapeake Bay steamboat.

Mission

A picture may be worth a thousand words, but actually preserving and presenting artifacts from a changing bayside town on Maryland's Eastern Shore may offer a greater opportunity to understand it's history in the long run. This remains the mission of The Rock Hall Museum. Founded by local educator Robert J. Johnson as a private museum in 1976, and later donated to the Town of Rock Hall by his widow, this institution continues to rely on volunteers for its development in two rooms at the Municipal Building on South Main Street, a short walk from the town center.

The focus is on community lifestyle, economy and traditions, elements that measure the human wealth at the heart of a small town with a past that reaches back through Bay-related commerce and farming, and a future that assuredly will be linked to its relationship with the Chesapeake Bay.

History

The Town of Rock Hall accepted the original Rock Hall Museum in October of Year 2000 as a gift from Mrs. Audrey Johnson, widow of the late Robert J. Johnson who founded the museum as a private institution in 1976. The Museum had been closed to the public for more than a year due to water damage and the growing inability of Mrs. Johnson and volunteers to maintain the premises. The Town of Rock Hall formally created the Rock Hall Museum Board as a committee of local government on November 1, 2000 for the purpose of rehabilitating the facility, re-opening it to the public and proving management services thereafter. The original set of Board appointees took office on January 1, 2002. The group consisted of Chairman Bill Danneberg; Vice Chairman Larry McDaniel; Secretary Sally Lewis; Treasurer Mary Guseman; Councilman Bob Willis; Betty Tucker; Carol DeGennaro; Honey Wood; Mary Sue Willis; Bill Betts; Tom McHugh; John Toulson, and Roberta Steele.

This group developed a plan for artifact re-cataloging and storage prior to repairs and improvements to existing premises in two rooms of the Municipal Building at 5585 Main Street. Plans included new climate control infrastructure along with new electrical service, ceiling, walls, windows, doors and carpet and display cases throughout. Physical rehabilitation required more than a year, with a substantial amount of the work completed on a volunteer basis. The Town of Rock Hall underwrote the cost of structural rehabilitation to the premises. The Museum, through donations, grants and approximately $18,000 in existing museum funds, paid for custom enhancements required for security and appropriate exhibit display fixtures.

Artifact Collections
oral history tapes
personal artifacts
tools and equipment
Native American artifacts
local history books
photographs
rare books
paintings
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MUSEUM CONFERENCES

April 27 - April 29, 2025

Oregon Museum Association 2025 Conference

TBA

Independence, Oregon

Beginning in 2025, the OMA annual conference will be held in Spring rather than Fall

The conference this year is all about trying new things. We are hoping to organize the conference into the following four tracks: Collections Care, Leadership, Emergency Preparedness, and Tourism

Check our website for more details in early 2025

The OMA newsletter is emailed every month with updates on OMA events, museum news, other events, trainings, jobs, grants and more for the museum community in Oregon.

For more information, please email connect@oregonmuseums.org.

October 1 - October 4, 2025

Western Museums Association’s (WMA) 2025 Annual Meeting

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Reno, Nevada

Save the Date for WMA 202

As we celebrate our 90th anniversary, join us to build relationships and soar higher than ever before. With the theme of ELEVATE, WMA 2025 will explore ways to lift up the experiences of cultural professionals and the communities they serve.

In Reno, Nevada, 4,400 feet above sea level, we will forward the progress of museums by looking to the future.

May 6 - May 9, 2025

2025 American Alliance of Museums (AAM) ANNUAL MEETING & MUSEUMEXPO

Los Angeles Convention Center

Los Angeles, California

AAM 2025 will focus on the theme, Museums & Trust.

Museums have long inspired high levels of public trust, surpassing news outlets, government organizations, researchers and scientists, corporations, and social media platforms. This consistent finding underscores our institutions’ unique position in society as stewards of knowledge, culture, science, and history—areas where credibility and reliability are paramount

In an era marked by mistrust and misinformation, museums have a rare ability to counterbalance the proliferation of false narratives and polarized perspectives. Using our trusted position, we can cultivate a more healthy, empathetic, and informed society.

But to do so, we must maintain our credibility proactively, embracing thoughtful, transparent, and collaborative practices that will defend against influences like bias, resource challenges, abuse of power, and social injustice

An Incredible MuseumExpo

AAM is again partnering this year with the Museum Store Association to host an incredible combined expo hall. Find the most innovative services, products, and solutions in the museum field. With 350 exhibitors, you are bound to find the right partner for your museum’s current challenges and opportunities.

May 5 - May 9, 2025

Museum Store Association FORWARD 2025 in LA

The Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles, California

Join MSA in LA

We’re excited about our next MSA FORWARD Conference & Expo in “The City of Angels” – Los Angeles, California in conjunction with the American Alliance of Museums

Join the Museum Store Association (MSA) and hundreds of nonprofit retail professionals for the 70th Annual MSA FORWARD Retail Conference & Expo, taking place May 5-9, 2025 at The Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California

Once again, MSA FORWARD will be held in conjunction with the 2025 American Alliance of Museums (AAM) Annual Meeting & Expo

Learn best practices and new ideas for store merchandising, operations, marketing, and sale

Participate in dedicated networking events and create connections that will inspire new ideas

Meet with over 200 MSA vendors about your product needs

Hear from knowledgeable industry experts during session breakouts and keynote presentations

Network with AAM attendees and exhibitor

September 10 - September 13, 2025

2025 Am Assoc for State and Local History Annual Conference

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Cincinnati, Ohio

The 2025 AASLH Annual Conference, in partnership with Ohio Local History Alliance, will take place as the history field makes the final preparations to kickoff off the 250th commemoration of the founding of the United States.

The 2025 conference theme, inspired by AASLH’s Making History at 250: The Field Guide for Semiquincentennial, is an opportunity to broadly explore one of the guide’s themes, The American Experiment. For many in the American colonies in 1776, independence from Britain represented a “leap into the dark” into an unknown future

We are excited for you to join us in Cincinnati as we encourage discussion about our democracy and civic institutions and how they can help strengthen understanding, inspire action, and reveal ways that all of us can participate in and shape the ongoing American experiment.

For more information, please call 615-320-3203 or email info@aaslh.org.

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