Carolina Museum of the Marine opens after 25 years

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1–2 minutes

Summary

A $36 million Marine Corps museum in Jacksonville held its ribbon-cutting and will open to the public June 8.

Why this matters

The museum adds a new public site for learning about Marine Corps history and local military connections in Jacksonville. The opening also provides practical information for visitors planning to attend.

The Carolina Museum of the Marine in Jacksonville held its ribbon-cutting after decades of planning, marking the opening of a $36 million museum focused on the history of the United States Marine Corps..

Exhibits begin with “They Came From The Sea,” which focuses on the Pacific Theater of World War II. Visitors can enter an amphibious vehicle as part of an exhibit on Marines landing on Iwo Jima.

“You know now they can bring their families and show them this is what your daddy or mommy does, or this is what your granddaddy did.”

Artifacts donated by Marine families appear throughout the museum. In the “Ties That Bind” section, visitors can learn about local Marines and their connections to the community.

“To all of those people that held onto their grandfathers’ and great-grandfathers’ stuff that donated it, we are very appreciative of that.”

The museum also includes an “Innovations” section with interactive exhibits on Marine aviation, technology, and changes across the Corps’ history.

Among the artifacts is a Vietnam-era Huey helicopter, described in the museum materials as the first of its kind issued to the Marine Corps at Camp Lejeune in the 1960s.

According to the museum’s website, the group rate for pre-booked groups of 10 or more is $12.

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