
12450
Coral Reef Dr. (SW152nd St.)
(305) 253-0063 or (888) 608-7246
Hours:
weekdays: 11am-3pm,
weekends:
1 am-4pm
Admission:
Adult:
$5
Children
3-12: $3
A
must-see for railroad buffs, this museum is
conveniently located next door to the Miami
Metrozoo.
Historic railroad cars on display include a 1949
Silver Crescent Dome car and the Ferdinand Magellen,
the only Pullman car specifically created for U.S.
presidents. The Magellen, built for Franklin D.
Roosevelt, was also used by Harry Truman, Dwight
Eisenhower, and Ronald Reagan.
Established
in 1957, the Gold Coast Railroad Museum is a
non-profit organization whose mission is to
preserve, exhibit, and operate historic railroad
equipment. It was started by a group of people in
Miami who were trying to save remnants of Florida
that were disappearing. The Magellen was one of the
earliest pieces in the collection. Other early
relics were the Florida East Coast Railway
locomotive 113, built in 1913, and locomotive 153,
the steam engine that pulled the rescue train out of
Marathon in the Florida Keys after the 1935
hurricane.
Hurricanes are a major part of the
history of this museum. It rose from a complex of
Navy blimp hangars destroyed in the1945 hurricane.
In 1992 the museum fell victim to Hurricane Andrew.
And even in
2000 it is still rebuilding from the devastation of
of that storm, which destroyed the original train shed and
some of the historic railroad equipment.
When the
museum is open, its engines are the Southernmost
operating steam engines in the continental U.S. The
58-acre museum has a small staff. If the timing is
right, visitors can take a 15-minute train ride. An
exhibit of the former Naval Air Station, which
supplied critical air support to convoys during
World War II, is open during regular museum hours.
The
museum site, which has been used as a backdrop for
TV productions and feature films, is available for
birthday parties, corporate events, and field trips.