CA, US & World

Atomic Age Meets Baltimore Fleet Week: Historic Nuclear Ship Savannah Opens to Public for Sail 250 Maryland

BALTIMORE, Maryland — The dawn of the atomic age is converging with maritime history in Charm City this week. As part of the massive, week-long Sail 250 Maryland and Airshow Baltimore celebrations commemorating the United States' semiquincentennial, which is the nation's 250th anniversary, the historic N.S. Savannah is opening its gangways to the public. Located at Pier 13 in the Canton Marine Terminal, this nautical gem offers visitors a rare, tangible look into a mid-century vision of a clean-energy future.

The N.S. Savannah occupies a singular, towering position in global maritime lore as the world's very first nuclear-powered merchant ship. While early automated video transcripts and draft broadcast scripts mistakenly place the vessel's construction during World War II—likely confusing it with its immediate pier neighbor, the iconic World War II Liberty ship S.S. John W. Brown—the Savannah was actually a product of the late 1950s Cold War era. Envisioned by the Eisenhower administration, the ship was designed to be an international statement of peaceful progress rather than a tool of military destruction.

Bob Adams, the President of the N.S. Savannah Association, notes that the ship was built because President Eisenhower decided the world needed to see that communities could do more with the atom than blow people up. Built in 1958 and launched in 1959, the vessel officially entered civilian service in 1962. Hailed at the time as a mid-century modern cathedral, it functioned as a floating diplomatic hub. In its first few years of operation, the Savannah welcomed more than 1.5 million passengers, including global warmth, celebrities, dignitaries, kings, and queens, all eager to see atomic innovation up close.

For tech enthusiasts and history buffs attending Sail 250, the tour provides an unprecedented engineering treat because the Savannah houses the only pressurized water reactor in the world that the public can physically walk through. The entire massive ship was powered by an ultra-dense uranium core. On-site displays show visitors a fuel block replica, illustrating how a remarkably small amount of atomic material could propel a massive liner around the globe without refueling. Decades ahead of her time, the Savannah was the ultimate low-carbon carrier, generating absolute zero greenhouse emissions during her operational life. Her design has taken on renewed relevance today as global shipping firms look back toward atomic propulsion to solve modern climate challenges.

Though the ship remains officially commissioned, it has been safely defueled for decades, meaning there is completely zero radioactivity aboard. The maritime community is currently working against a ticking clock because the vessel's federal nuclear license is scheduled for formal termination next year, at which point the federal government will make the hull available for permanent donation.

Local preservationists are leveraging the massive foot traffic of Sail 250 to rally support for keeping the Savannah permanently berthed in Maryland waters. The goal is to integrate her into Baltimore’s existing world-class collection of historic museum ships, allowing the inner harbor to tell the full narrative of naval evolution across three distinct epochs. This includes the Age of Sail represented locally by the historic USS Constellation built in 1854, the World War II fleet represented by the neighboring S.S. John W. Brown Liberty ship built in 1942, and the Atomic Age represented by the N.S. Savannah built in 1958.

For those planning to attend the open house, the Savannah offers a premier, front-row vantage point for Airshow Baltimore. The exhibition flight box for the high-speed aviation performances starts directly at the ship's stern. Adams notes that when planes make their low-altitude passes, spectators on the deck will practically be able to see the color of the pilots' eyes as they fly by.

The ship will be open to the public for one week starting Tuesday, June 23, through Wednesday, July 1, 2026. Daily public hours run from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with the last boarding strictly enforced at 4:00 p.m. While parking is limited at the terminal on weekdays, a free public shuttle bus will run directly to the pier from Fells Point on the weekend. Visitors are encouraged to bring a personal cooler with ice and non-alcoholic drinks to beat the summer heat while watching the flyovers from the historic open deck.

Explore NBCPalmSprings.com, where we are connecting the valley.

By: NBC Palm Springs

June 22, 2026

NS Savannah nuclear merchant shipSail 250 Maryland BaltimoreAirshow Baltimore 250th anniversaryBob Adams NS Savannah AssociationAtoms for Peace Dwight EisenhowerBaltimore Inner Harbor historic shipsSS John W Brown Liberty shipRoggin ReportJune 2026
Link Copied To Clipboard!
Atomic Age Meets Baltimore Fleet Week: Historic Nuclear Ship Savannah Opens to Public for Sail 250 Maryland