Whaling Museum
13 Broad Street
The candle factory was built by the Mitchell family immediately following Nantucket's Great Fire in 1846 and close to the end of the island's whaling era. Less than two years later, island businessmen William Hadwen and Nathaniel Barney purchased the manufactory and continued to operate it as a candleworks until the end of whaling in the 1860s. The structure served as a warehouse until its conversion into the offices of the New England Steamship Company in the 1870s. In 1919, the candleworks was outfitted to use as storage and housed an antiques shop. In 1929, the building was purchased and converted into the NHA's Whaling Museum, and remained as such for more than seventy years.
Restored in 2005, the Nantucket Whaling Museum features a restored 1847 candle factory, expanded top-quality exhibition space, a fully accessible rooftop observation deck overlooking Nantucket harbor, and the sperm whale skeleton.
In 2008, the whaling museum received accreditation from the American Association of Museums, an honor bestowed upon fewer than one of every twenty-two museums in the country.
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Visit Us and You Will See...
a forty-six
foot skeleton of a sperm whale that washed ashore on New Year's Day
in 1998
the 1849
Fresnel Lens used in Sankaty Head Lighthouse, a restored 1881 tower
clock
Decorative
arts, Scrimshaw, Lightship baskets
Paintings,
Samplers, Portraits of sea faring men and women
items of Nantucket history and prehistory.
and more...