The Museum of the American Railroad, formerly known as the Age of Steam Railroad Museum, is a railroad museum in Frisco, Texas.[1] The museum has more than 70 pieces of steam, diesel, passenger, and freight railroad equipment sitting on 15 acres making it one of the largest historic rail collections in the US. Guests may walk through some of the equipment on guided tours.
History
The museum began as a small exhibit at Fair Park in 1963, and continued as a staple of the annual State Fair of Texas. It officially became a museum in 1986,[2] remaining at its original site until November 2011.[3] The museum has fully moved to Frisco, Texas;[4] the move was based on a strategic plan, called Visions 2006, which called for a comprehensive reorganization of the museum, including new facilities, new governance and new programs.[5] The museum's offices and some exhibits are temporarily housed at the Frisco Heritage Museum while construction continues on the museum's new location two blocks south.[3]
TrainTopia, a G scale model train layout, opened in July 2018 in the Frisco Discovery Center next to the museum's site. An additional O-scale layout is being reassembled.
Pullman Company "Goliad": 12-Open section, 1-Drawing room, Built 1926. Served almost exclusively on Southern Pacific's Sunset Limited. One of the first cars air-conditioned in the 1930s[7]
The museum has an exhibit called "TrainTopia – A Railroad Odyssey in Miniature" in the Frisco Discovery Center next to the museum.[8] This is a 2,500-square-foot professionally-built G scalemodel railroad layout donated to the museum by the Sanders family;[9] a $300,000 donation from the Ryan Foundation funded moving the layout and preparing the exhibit space.[10] The scene spans Texas to Arizona, and includes details such as the dramatic rock formations of the Four Corners region near New Mexico, an animated downtown Dallas street scene, the Palo Duro Drive-In Theater with a movie playing, a West Texas refinery, and working sawmills in Colorado.[8] A custom light show changes the exhibit from day to night.[8] The layout has hundreds of locomotives and cars, most made by LGB in Germany.[9]
^Lettenberger, Bob (September 2023). "Museum of the American Railroad focusing on mission fulfillment". Trains. No. 9 Vol 83. Kalmbach Media. pp. 46–47.