I just want to draw your attn. to another grand old lady that really needs help. Again the last of her kind and IMHO much more famous then Texas. From the Spanish American wars greatest victory to bringing back the first unknown.
www.phillyseaport.org
Personally I think having your museum ships laid out like this is a real good idea. Yea seeing them in water is their natural element, but when no one wants to spend money on them, and they do need money spent on them as Texas has showed us storing them this way is far more inexpensive in the long run. She is again the last of her kind, and she is set in concrete as part of the limitation talks in the 20's.
Battleship MikasaMikasa is a pre-dreadnought battleship built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) in the late 1890s, and was the only ship of her class. Named after Mount Mikasa in Nara, Japan, the ship served as the flagship of Admiral Tōgō Heihachirō throughout the Russo-Japanese War of...
museumships.us
Lets not forget the ones that are not so lucky, this grand old lady made it through WWI and Jutland, was very active in WWII and the leftists in england ignored the calls to turn her into a museum ship. So she went off to the scrapper, however she was not going to go quietly, fighting all the way she broke her lines and beached herself, She could not be refloated so the just cut her up where she lay.
At the time the only survivor of Jutland battle....THE WWI naval battle. The left in england refused to spend the money to store or turn her into a museum.
HMS Warspite
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