Close Menu
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
  • More Articles

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending
Tesla shares drop after EV sales fall short of expectations

Tesla shares drop after EV sales fall short of expectations

April 2, 2026
Sam Altman says he ‘miscalibrated’ the mood of distrust toward AI and the government in the Pentagon deal

Sam Altman says he ‘miscalibrated’ the mood of distrust toward AI and the government in the Pentagon deal

April 2, 2026
KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

April 2, 2026
OpenAI’s CFO says the company is passing on opportunities because it does not have enough compute

OpenAI’s CFO says the company is passing on opportunities because it does not have enough compute

April 2, 2026
Can You Answer 13 Simple Questions About Your Day-to-Day Earning, Spending and Saving?

Can You Answer 13 Simple Questions About Your Day-to-Day Earning, Spending and Saving?

April 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
April 2, 2026 9:54 am EDT
|
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  Market Data
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
  • More Articles
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Home » World War II museum ships suddenly feel less like history after a US submarine sank an Iranian warship
World War II museum ships suddenly feel less like history after a US submarine sank an Iranian warship
Finance

World War II museum ships suddenly feel less like history after a US submarine sank an Iranian warship

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 7, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

For Brian Auer, the operations manager at Historic Ships in Baltimore, the video of a US Navy submarine sinking an Iranian warship this week looked strikingly familiar.

“I saw the footage of that Iranian frigate getting torpedoed, and it looks like any picture I see from World War II of a similar attack happening,” he told Business Insider of the video released by the Department of Defense on Wednesday.

Before this week’s attack in the Indian Ocean, the last confirmed US Navy submarine to sink an enemy ship in combat was the USS Torsk, a World War II submarine that sank two Japanese vessels in 1945 before becoming part of the museum that Auer manages.

Since 1945, large-scale battles between warships have been rare. As naval warfare reemerges as a key strategy in Operation Epic Fury against Iran, museum ships that saw combat in World War II are finding new relevance, showing not just how naval war was fought, but how it might look today. Suddenly, the floating museums feel a lot less like history.

“Those of us who work on museum ships don’t like war,” Ryan Szimanski, the curator at Battleship New Jersey in Camden, New Jersey, told Business Insider. “In many cases, we work here to try and teach people about how awful wars were.

“However, the fact that the United States has fought a naval action — one of the first ones since World War II — is making museum ships like us relevant and part of the public discussion in a way that we haven’t been.”

Every time Talia publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox!

Stay connected to Talia and get more of their work as it publishes.

Museum ships offer immersive experiences

There are around 75 World War II-era museum ships open to the public across the US. These decommissioned battleships, submarines, destroyers, aircraft carriers, and other vessels offer visitors the chance to climb aboard and explore the interiors themselves.

Guided tours, often led by Navy veterans with firsthand experience serving on similar vessels, take visitors through combat areas, such as torpedo rooms, gun turrets, and command centers.

Battleship New Jersey, for example, offers a rare look into Tomahawk cruise missiles as the first surface warship to carry them in 1982. The long-range missiles have also been used to sink Iranian ships during Operation Epic Fury.

“Because those are contemporary systems, to be able to see a Tomahawk missile, to be able to see Tomahawk missile launchers in a museum — there’s only a handful of museum ships like us that you could come and see to get that experience,” Szimanski said.

Some ships even offer sleepover experiences where guests can eat meals in the crew’s mess and spend the night in sailors’ bunks.

“It is highly unlikely that the average person will get the chance to visit an active-duty Navy ship,” Szimanski said. “So to experience the conditions, to see what it’s like to serve on a warship, particularly one that has seen combat, visiting a museum ship is your best chance.”

‘Remarkably similar’ to modern Navy ships

While some technologies and configurations found in World War II submarines may be outdated, many aspects of how they operate remain the same.

“It’s important to remember that the Navy, the military, all of us, operate in a world governed by laws of physics, and so there are some things that are just never going to change in how submarines work,” Auer said. “If you walk through a modern Ohio-class, ballistic missile submarine, you’re going to find things that are exactly the same, or done exactly the same way, on the USS Torsk. And what we can really show is where those things were first done, and why they were done that way, and why they are still done that way.”

Modern submarines still appear “remarkably similar” to their museum counterparts, Szimanski said. The layout of submarines hasn’t changed all that much since World War II. They largely still have the same spaces to eat, sleep, and fire torpedoes.

Auer says that when he leads tours of the USS Torsk for active-duty sailors, he often gets the response, “Huh, we’re still doing it this way.”

The biggest differences can be found in the ships’ capabilities, Hugh McKeever, the shipboard education manager at the Independence Seaport Museum in Philadelphia, told Business Insider.

Diesel-powered submarines like the USS Becuna, which sank 3,888 tons of shipping in World War II before arriving at the Independence Seaport Museum, had to spend most of their time on the surface with only about 12 hours’ worth of oxygen at a time. Today’s nuclear-powered submarines operate with an unlimited fuel supply and can stay submerged for upward of six months.

“As far as going out to sea, their ability is pretty much limited only by food,” McKeever said.

Overall, World War II-era submarines are less antiquated than one might assume. Some even still work. The USS Torsk’s sister ship, the USS Cutlass, was commissioned in 1945, sold to Taiwan in 1973, and remains operational as part of the Republic of China Navy.

“These boats, to us, are so outdated that they’re museums, but for the rest of the world, they’re relatively advanced,” Auer said. “They’re still very capable of doing the function they were originally designed for. So, were they implemented by some foreign threat, they would be a threat.”

Floating museums find new relevance

For ship museum curators, the resurgence of naval battles in the US war with Iran underscores the contemporary relevance of World War II museum ships and the battle stars they earned. McKeever, for one, anticipates getting more questions about torpedoes as the summer tourist season ramps up.

“For the US as a maritime power, the economic prosperity of the country is tied to the sea and the Navy,” McKeever said. “Our museum vessels represent that constant need for change and growth as a country.”

After all, as Szimanski noted, it was just days ago that no active US Navy ships had ever sunk an enemy warship — the only Navy ships that had fought a naval battle were all museum ships. Despite some rust and peeling paint, it seems they still have a lot to teach us.



Read the full article here

feel history Iranian museum sank ships submarine suddenly war warship World
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Tesla shares drop after EV sales fall short of expectations

Tesla shares drop after EV sales fall short of expectations

KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

Anthropic is learning that there are no take-backs on the internet

Anthropic is learning that there are no take-backs on the internet

College students say they are changing their majors because of AI

College students say they are changing their majors because of AI

Here’s who’s suing OpenAI, from Elon Musk to George R. R. Martin — and what it could cost Sam Altman

Here’s who’s suing OpenAI, from Elon Musk to George R. R. Martin — and what it could cost Sam Altman

I finally sat in the Bezos-backed Slate truck. It’s designed to be unfinished.

I finally sat in the Bezos-backed Slate truck. It’s designed to be unfinished.

Inside the hype train for Trader Joe’s TikTok-viral lavender tote bag

Inside the hype train for Trader Joe’s TikTok-viral lavender tote bag

Hedge funds’ first-quarter returns are rolling in. Here’s how big names fared in choppy markets.

Hedge funds’ first-quarter returns are rolling in. Here’s how big names fared in choppy markets.

Inside the race to recreate Claude Code and mine its guts for revelations

Inside the race to recreate Claude Code and mine its guts for revelations

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Sam Altman says he ‘miscalibrated’ the mood of distrust toward AI and the government in the Pentagon deal

Sam Altman says he ‘miscalibrated’ the mood of distrust toward AI and the government in the Pentagon deal

April 2, 2026
KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

KPMG sees ’10x consultant’ potential as its tax pros start building their own tools

April 2, 2026
OpenAI’s CFO says the company is passing on opportunities because it does not have enough compute

OpenAI’s CFO says the company is passing on opportunities because it does not have enough compute

April 2, 2026
Can You Answer 13 Simple Questions About Your Day-to-Day Earning, Spending and Saving?

Can You Answer 13 Simple Questions About Your Day-to-Day Earning, Spending and Saving?

April 2, 2026
Anthropic is learning that there are no take-backs on the internet

Anthropic is learning that there are no take-backs on the internet

April 2, 2026

Latest News

The CEO of Ryanair, Europe’s biggest airline, warned that a quarter of its fuel supply is under threat

The CEO of Ryanair, Europe’s biggest airline, warned that a quarter of its fuel supply is under threat

April 2, 2026
It’s National Burrito Day: Here’s How, Where to Get One for Free

It’s National Burrito Day: Here’s How, Where to Get One for Free

April 2, 2026
College students say they are changing their majors because of AI

College students say they are changing their majors because of AI

April 2, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.