File #: R-4-23    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 1/20/2023 In control: Finance Committee
On agenda: 2/27/2023 Final action: 3/13/2023
Title: Skipjack Wilma Lee - Docking Fee Waiver - For the purpose of waiving the fees for docking the Chesapeake Bay skipjack, Wilma Lee, at the Annapolis City Dock March 31-April 2, 2023, in celebration of "Maryland Day."
Sponsors: Ross Arnett
Attachments: 1. R-4-23 First Reader, 2. R-4-23 Fiscal Impact Note, 3. R-4-23 Signed
Title
Skipjack Wilma Lee - Docking Fee Waiver - For the purpose of waiving the fees for docking the Chesapeake Bay skipjack, Wilma Lee, at the Annapolis City Dock March 31-April 2, 2023, in celebration of "Maryland Day."
Body
CITY COUNCIL OF THE
City of Annapolis

Resolution 4-23

Introduced by: Alderman Arnett

Referred to
Finance Committee

A RESOLUTION concerning

Skipjack Wilma Lee - Docking Fee Waiver

FOR the purpose of waiving the fees for docking the Chesapeake Bay skipjack, Wilma Lee, at the Annapolis City Dock March 31-April 2, 2023, in celebration of "Maryland Day."

WHEREAS, the Annapolis-based Wilma Lee is one of only a few remaining Chesapeake Bay skipjacks out of an estimated 800 that once sailed the oyster-laden waters along the Maryland, Virginia and Carolina shores and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places; and

WHEREAS, skipjacks are the official State boat of Maryland (Maryland Code, General Provisions ? 7-327), noted by the Maryland General Assembly at the time, "Nothing better represents the way of life of Maryland watermen than the historic Chesapeake Boat known as the Skipjack"; and

WHEREAS, the Wilma Lee is a member of the last commercial sailing fleet in the United States, built in Wingate, Maryland, in 1940 by the well-known boat builder Bronza Parks;

WHEREAS, the Wilma Lee was purchased by the Annapolis Maritime Museum from the non-profit Ocracoke Alive in June 2018 to preserve the maritime heritage of Annapolis and the Chesapeake Bay region; and

WHEREAS, the Wilma Lee dredged for nearly 55 years before running into the Tilghman Island drawbridge, which struck down her mast, and went through a five-year restoration in 1995, modernizing her with diesel engines, air-conditioning, a generator, and electric refrigeration, enabling her to continue oyster dredging along Eastern Seaboard, then was severely damaged again by Hurricane Arthur in 2014 and restored once again by the non-profit Ocracoke Alive in Ocracoke, No...

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