Kalmar Nyckel Foundation
Delaware's tall ship and a small maritime museum on the Christina riverfront — kid-magnet on Pirate Day, sleepy and free on a quiet Saturday.
The Quick Version
- • A working replica of Delaware's 1638 tall ship Kalmar Nyckel, docked on the Christina River, with a small maritime museum (Copeland Maritime Center) on the same site.
- • Maritime Center general admission is cheap — summer (May 1–Oct) $10 adult / $5 youth (ages 3–12); winter (Nov–Apr 30) $5 adult / $3 youth; ages 2 and under always free. Parking is free, with 100+ spots.
- • The headline family days are the free 2nd Saturday programs — Pirate Day, LEGO Shipbuilding, scavenger hunts. Otherwise it's a quiet 60–90 minute stop.
- • Open waterfront — the dock is not fenced. Hold hands with little ones near the water.
Best Ages
Sweet spot 4–12
Plan For
60–90 minutes for the Maritime Center + dockside ship; 2+ hours on a 2nd Saturday or Pirate Day; half-day if you've booked an actual sail
Adults
$10 summer (May 1 – Oct) / $5 winter (Nov – Apr 30) — Copeland Maritime Center general admission
Kids
$5 summer / $3 winter (ages 3–12)
What to Expect
Kalmar Nyckel is one of Delaware's most under-appreciated family stops. The headline is the ship herself — a full-scale, fully-rigged replica of the Dutch-built Kalmar Nyckel, the 1638 vessel that brought Swedish colonists to the site of present-day Wilmington. She's a working tall ship: in season she actually sails, with paid crew and trained volunteers. When she's docked, you can usually walk down to look at her from the pier; on certain days you can pay for a dockside deck tour and go aboard.
The Copeland Maritime Center is the indoor side. It's a single-story museum building with kid-scale exhibits about the 17th-century Atlantic crossing, life aboard, navigation tools, and Delaware's colonial history. Plan 30–45 minutes for a curious kid — it's not the Smithsonian, but it's well-designed for the 5–10 set, and there are usually a few hands-on stations.
The second Saturday of each month is the real reason to come. Free or near-free family events anchor the calendar: Captain Kidd's Pirate Day (sword school, dress-up, crafts), LEGO Shipbuilding, scavenger hunts, themed history programs. These turn an otherwise quiet 60-minute museum stop into a 2-hour outing where kids end up genuinely engaged.
The single most important thing to know: the dock is open waterfront. No fence, no railing between the pier and the river in some spots. If you've got a toddler or a pre-K kid who bolts, this is a hold-hands situation the entire time you're outside. Most families do fine; it's not dangerous if you're paying attention — just know what you're walking into.
Sailing trips on the ship itself (2- to 3-hour sails on the Christina and Delaware) are a separate, more expensive ticket and usually have a minimum age. They're a real experience — kids who are into ships will talk about it for years — but they're not a casual drop-in. Book ahead through the foundation's ticketing page.
Did You Know?
The Kalmar Nyckel is a full-scale, fully-rigged working replica of the 1638 ship that carried Swedish colonists to what's now Wilmington — and unlike most museum ships, she actually sails the Christina and Delaware Rivers in season with paid crew and trained volunteers.
Who It's Best For
Babies and toddlers: the Maritime Center exhibits are kid-scale and interactive, and a 2nd Saturday Pirate Day works fine with a toddler in tow — but the open dock means constant supervision near the water. Preschoolers: pirate dress-up, climbing on deck during dockside tours, and the indoor LEGO shipbuilding events are the sweet spot. Elementary (5–11): peak age — they get the history, can do the sword-school demos, and follow a deck tour. Tweens: dockside tours and (eventually) sailing programs. Sails on the ship itself typically have a minimum age — check the booking page before planning around it.
Highlights
The Tall Ship
All agesA full-scale 1638 ship replica, fully rigged. View from the dock for free when she's in port; pay for a dockside tour to actually go aboard. The most striking thing about Kalmar Nyckel and the reason kids remember the visit.
Captain Kidd's Pirate Day (2nd Saturday)
Ages 3–10The single best family day at Kalmar Nyckel. Pirate dress-up, sword-school demos, kids on deck, crafts, and history activities. Typically free or low-cost.
Copeland Maritime Center
Ages 4–10The indoor museum — kid-scale exhibits on 17th-century sailing, navigation, Delaware's colonial history, and life aboard. 30–45 minutes for a curious kid. The right rainy-day backup if you're already on the Riverfront.
Deck Tours
Ages 5+Paid dockside tours that get you onto the ship. Volunteers walk you through the rigging, the cannon deck, and the captain's cabin. The bridge between “look at the ship” and “sail on the ship.”
LEGO Shipbuilding
Ages 5–10Recurring 2nd Saturday program — guided LEGO construction tied to ship history. Indoors, low-key, popular with the 5–10 set.
Public Sails (advanced)
Ages 8+2- to 3-hour sailing trips on the Christina and Delaware. Separate (more expensive) ticket, minimum age applies. Once-in-a-while experience for ship-obsessed kids.
What to Skip with Little Ones
- • Skip a visit when the ship is out of port if seeing the ship is the whole point — check the schedule. The Maritime Center alone is a thinner outing.
- • Skip the open dock on a windy day with a toddler — wind off the river is no joke, and the unfenced edge means constant management.
- • Skip booking a sail for a kid under the listed minimum age. The trips are long and there's nowhere to go if it isn't working.
Logistics
Admission
Adults
$10 summer (May 1 – Oct) / $5 winter (Nov – Apr 30) — Copeland Maritime Center general admission
Kids
$5 summer / $3 winter (ages 3–12)
Under
Free (ages 2 and under)
Copeland Maritime Center general admission is seasonal: $10 adult / $5 youth from May 1 through October; $5 adult / $3 youth November through April 30. Ages 2 and under are always free. Special programs (Pirate Day, LEGO Shipbuilding, 2nd Saturday events) are typically free with admission or fully free. Actual sailing trips on the Kalmar Nyckel and dockside deck tours are ticketed separately and cost considerably more — book through the foundation's ticketing site. Winter Deck Tours run select Saturdays through late April at an additional ~$5/adult and $3/youth.
Membership tip: If you think you'll do more than one family program a year, a membership covers Maritime Center admission and may include discounts on deck tours and sails.
Getting There
Parking
Free on-site lot with 100+ spaces. Easy on most days; fills on Pirate Day and other 2nd Saturday events.
On busy program days, arrive at the front end of the event window — the lot empties as fast as it fills. Overflow parking is available on the streets around East 7th Street if needed.
Entrance
Single main entrance into the Copeland Maritime Center building, off the parking lot. From inside, you can walk straight out to the dock where the ship is moored (when she's in port).
Parent Logistics
The Maritime Center is fully stroller-accessible and the path from the parking lot to the dock is flat and paved. The ship itself is not stroller-accessible — getting on board means narrow steps and a sloped gangway, so you'll wear a baby or leave the stroller at the dock.
Restrooms inside the Maritime Center.
Not confirmed — bring a portable changing pad to be safe.
Limited. The Maritime Center is fully indoor and shaded. The dock itself is open waterfront — almost no shade, exposed to sun and wind. Bring hats and sunscreen, especially in summer.
Food & Snacks
No food on-site. No food service on site. The Riverfront Market and downtown Wilmington restaurants are a 5-minute drive.
Snack strategy: Pack a snack — there are benches inside the Maritime Center and along the dock. For lunch, the Riverfront Market food hall (3 S Orange St) is 5 minutes away, or head into downtown Wilmington.
Pro Tips
- ✓ Plan around 2nd Saturday programs. That's the difference between a quick stop and a real outing.
- ✓ Confirm the ship is actually in port before you drive over — she travels for festivals in summer. The schedule page on kalmarnyckel.org is authoritative.
- ✓ Wear something you can move in on Pirate Day. Sword-school demos are participatory; sneakers > sandals.
- ✓ If you've got a kid who loves ships, the dockside deck tour is the high-leverage upgrade over general admission. Worth it once.
- ✓ Sunscreen and hats. The dock is fully exposed — there's no shade once you leave the Maritime Center.
When to Go
Best Time to Visit
2nd Saturdays for the free family programs — that's the day Kalmar Nyckel feels like a real outing instead of a quick stop. Otherwise: Saturday or Sunday 10–4 (Sundays open May 23–Sep 27 only). Mid-April through October is the active season; the ship is in port and tours are running.
Seasonal Notes
The Kalmar Nyckel sails from mid-April through October. In summer, she sometimes travels for festivals — check the schedule before planning a visit specifically to see the ship in port. Winter Deck Tours run on select Saturdays through late April. Maritime Center Sunday hours run May 23 through September 27.
Rainy Day?
The Copeland Maritime Center is fully indoor and works as a 45-minute rainy stop. A scheduled 2nd Saturday program is the better rainy-day call — most are indoor or under the building's overhang. Pair with the Delaware Children's Museum (10 minutes away on the Riverfront) for a full rainy day.
While You're in the Area
The Wilmington Riverfront is 5 minutes away — Delaware Children's Museum, Riverwalk Mini Golf, DuPont Environmental Education Center. Old New Castle (15 minutes south) is a natural pairing for a colonial-history day.
Upcoming Events
Verified against the venue’s official info.
Last reviewed May 20, 2026. Prices re-checked May 20, 2026. Confirm anything dated (admission, hours, special events) on the venue’s own site before you drive.
Sources: kalmarnyckel.org , kalmarbooking.incitehosting.com