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Mid America Museum of Aviation and Transportation

Aviation museum in Sioux City, Iowa From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Mid America Museum of Aviation & Transportation is an aviation museum located at the Sioux Gateway Airport in Sioux City, Iowa.

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History

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Establishment

The Siouxland Historical Aviation Association was formed in Spring 1990 with the goal of establishing an aviation museum.[1][a] The group received approval from the airport to build a museum on 20 acres (0.081 km2) of property at the northwest corner of the airport in 1993.[3][4] In 1996, it began lobbying the city to allow the organization to restore a former terminal building that was planned for demolition.[5] The World's Biggest Mini Air Museum opened 1 June 1996 in a complex of six former Air National Guard buildings.[6][7] However, in January 2002, the then Mid America Air Museum was informed that the buildings it occupied would have to be demolished for a ramp expansion to accommodate aerial refueling aircraft for the 185th Air Refueling Wing.[8] It then moved to a temporary location in downtown Sioux City.[9]

New building

The museum launched a capital campaign for a new 62,500 sq ft (5,810 m2) building in May 2002 and changed its name to Mid America Museum of Aviation & Transportation.[9][10] Just under two years later, it had raised half of the necessary funding.[11] The museum changed its name to the Warner Museum of Aviation and Transportation after receiving a donation from Jim Warner of the Warner Group in 2007 that made up the difference.[12] It broke ground on a new 30,000 sq ft (2,800 m2) building at the Sioux Gateway Airport in April 2009.[13][14] Shortly thereafter, the museum received a Boeing 727 from FedEx.[15] The museum opened to the public on 5 March 2010.[16] By the end of September, it had changed its name back to Mid America Museum of Aviation & Transportation.[17]

Construction on a new memorial to United Airlines Flight 232 began in May 2014.[18] Two months later, the museum held a three day event on the 25th anniversary of the crash.[19][20] Three years later, the museum acquired a twelfth scale model of a DC-10 for its Flight 232 exhibit.[21]

In 2022, the museum received a grant to turn the interior of its Boeing 727 into a STEM learning center.[22]

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Exhibits

An exhibit about United Airlines Flight 232 includes a model of a DC-10, the damaged pilot's seat and a map of the aircraft's flight path.[23] Outside there is a memorial to the flight at the initial impact site.[24]

Collection

Programs

The museum holds STEM programs for children.[29]

See also

References

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