NEWS FEED

Divorces ASKED

6 hours ago

Marriages (Tulsans unless indicated)

6 hours ago

Tulsa Club owner Josh Barrett vows to remake historic building

5 hours ago

Tulsa school bus involved in crash; no injuries reported

1 hour ago

Tulsa museum's collection heading to Arkansas

By Associated Press on Sep 16, 2013, at 8:42 AM  



Local

Bicyclist injured after being hit by car

No citations were issued after police determined the driver was not a fault, police said.

Veterans visit WWII Memorial with Honor Flight

The veterans, 37 of whom are from Tulsa, will visit the national World War II Memorial and will see the changing of the guard at Arlington National Cemetery.

NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The artifacts and documents from an Oklahoma museum dedicated to the history of the Arkansas River are heading to a maritime museum in North Little Rock, museum officials said.

The Arkansas River Historical Museum at the Tulsa Port of Catoosa is closing, but an education center will open in its place, said Susan McWatters, the maritime museum education coordinator at the Tulsa, museum.

The museum's collection — which includes journals, photographs and American Indian artifacts — will be sent to the Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum in North Little Rock, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported Monday.

"What we're doing on our end is closing down the museum to give it to (North Little Rock) and opening up an education center," to be named the Oklahoma Maritime Education Center, McWatters said. "That's the whole reason this transition is going on."

The North Little Rock museum primarily focuses on military items, with the USS Razorback submarine serving as a focal point. The museum is located in downtown North Little Rock, across the Arkansas River from Little Rock.

"It's another museum for North Little Rock to bring more people into central Arkansas," said Steve Owen, a member of the Arkansas museum's board of directors. "The maritime museum is more military in nature. The Arkansas River Historical Museum is more about the river's commerce and recreational aspects, things of that nature."

The materials will be moved to North Little Rock within the next few weeks, officials said.

Greg Zonner, the Arkansas museum's director, said the collection will temporarily be stored in a warehouse until the maritime museum space is reconfigured for the new items.

"Their museum up there (in Oklahoma) wasn't that big," Zonner said. "They have a lot of artifacts. We'll condense and consolidate it a little bit. I think it will be a good fit. It will open up our educational opportunities for school groups. This expands what we offer and gives us a chance to explore the history of the Arkansas River itself a little more in-depth."

Local

Bicyclist injured after being hit by car

No citations were issued after police determined the driver was not a fault, police said.

Veterans visit WWII Memorial with Honor Flight

The veterans, 37 of whom are from Tulsa, will visit the national World War II Memorial and will see the changing of the guard at Arlington National Cemetery.

COMMENTS

Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories. You can either sign in to your Tulsa World account or use Facebook.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free. To comment through Facebook, please sign in to your account before you comment.

Read our commenting policy.


Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free.

Read our commenting policy.

By clicking "Submit" you are agreeing to our terms and conditions, and grant Tulsa World the right and license to publish the content of your posted comment, in whole or in part, in Tulsa World.