The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum has added to its community offerings with the recent installation of an electric vehicle charging station.
Located in CBMM’s parking lot, the new ChargePoint EV charging station and its installation costs were donated by Choptank Electric Cooperative. It is a level 2 station with two ports that provide AC at 240 volts with capability to offer 18-28 miles of range per hour of charging.

A CBMM guest charges their electric vehicle on a recent morning during Summer Camp drop-off.
Available now, the charging station offers CBMM guests the opportunity to charge their EVs while enjoying its waterfront campus and programming. The general public is welcome to use this new amenity, as well.
Choptank Electric Cooperative has previously placed similar community charging stations in the Town of St. Michaels along Fremont Street and in the parking lot of the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center in Dorchester County.




Payment by cash, check, or credit card will be accepted during this sale. CBMM general admission is not required for those only shopping the sale that day.
Mixing popular standards, a variety of musical styles, and dance-able rhythms, the Shades of Blue Orchestra combines brass, woodwind, and rhythm instruments to present music from the 1930s to present representing an eclectic variety of genres. This 18-piece Big Band based out of Baltimore has been entertaining guests across the region since 1976.
Monday’s launch event, including an awards presentation and pickle juice toast, was a well-deserved celebration of months of hard work on the project.
Wallace is eager to make sure it’s something that will allow the students to build on the hands-on skills that they’ve practiced this spring and the camaraderie the group developed along the way.
One of just a handful of certified professional lampists, Fosburg is visiting CBMM to move one of the Fresnel lenses currently on display in the
The Fresnel lens, designed by French physicist Anthony Fresnel in 1822, revolutionized maritime navigation around the world in the 19th century by offering the ability to cast lighthouse beacons miles farther than was ever possible before thanks to the refraction from hundreds of pieces of specially cut glass.