Giving a Future to Alaska's Past Since 1967
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry
Alaska's LARGEST Museum
Open 10 am to 5 pm, every day
Alaska's history has often followed the path dictated by two opposing forces - the desire to properly exploit the natural resources, and the need for the technology and transportation to reach, process, and remove the products. At each step, Alaska's development has been limited by the available technology and transportation of the day.
The Alaska of today was formed in a series of booms and busts. A new resource was found, the technology to exploit it became available, and the resource was exhausted. Gold and other resource exploration resulted in the development and use of railroads, roads, river steamboats, and (later) aircraft to serve the transportation needs. As the inevitable bust followed the boom, the technology of the day was left behind on the tundra and in the forests to rust and rot because it was too expensive and too impractical to remove.
MATI was established to give a home to the transportation and industrial remnants and to tell the stories of the people and the machines that opened Alaska to exploration and growth.
MATI’s History
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry (MATI) started in 1967 as the Air Progress Museum. It was a small collection of Alaskan transportation artifacts gathered for the centennial celebration of the United States purchasing Alaska from Russia in 1867. The exhibit was on International Airport Road in Anchorage.
It included six retired railroad cars that brought to Alaska as troop carriers during World War II. They were refurbished and filled with exhibits about Alaska’s transportation history. Those rail cars were named “The Centennial Train.” They became Alaska’s only rolling museum, traveling the rail belt from Seward to Fairbanks. The Centennial Train rested beside the museum for several years.
Fire forced the museum to close its doors in 1973.
Several years later, a determined group of Valley residents arranged for the remains of the museum’s collection, charred aircraft, and The Centennial Train to be moved to Palmer. They hauled all they could preserve to the new location. In 1976, a 15-year non-renewable lease was signed, giving the museum a three-acre corner on the Alaska State Fair grounds. Along with this move came a new name, “The Transportation Museum of Alaska.”
Alaska’s pioneer history proved interesting to visitors. The collection expanded and it became the “Alaska Historical and Transportation Museum.” People enjoyed looking at the old airplanes, trains, and tractors.
In the 1980s, with Alaska oil prosperity at its height, the State Legislature allocated expansion and operating funds to the museum. Governmental funding diminished over the years. The museum now receives no federal, state, or city funding.
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry is now a private, non-profit corporation, governed by a volunteer board of directors. It is funded by museum admissions, gift shop sales, and donations from our members and friends.
MATI moved to its present location at 3800 West Museum Dr in Wasilla in 1992 onto over 20 acres. In addition to a large gallery, we have a train yard, rows and rows of outdoor artifacts, and an exhibit hall. Many of the artifacts in the museum were donated by individuals. Some are on loan to us from the military and other organizations.
MATI’s mission is the collection, conservation, restoration, exhibition, and interpretation of artifacts relating to Alaska’s transportation and industrial history. Education is at our core. The museum’s scope is statewide and the collections reflect an all encompassing journey!
The museum is open from late May through Labor Day during the summer.
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry
Alaska's LARGEST Museum
Open 10 am to 5 pm, every day
Alaska's history has often followed the path dictated by two opposing forces - the desire to properly exploit the natural resources, and the need for the technology and transportation to reach, process, and remove the products. At each step, Alaska's development has been limited by the available technology and transportation of the day.
The Alaska of today was formed in a series of booms and busts. A new resource was found, the technology to exploit it became available, and the resource was exhausted. Gold and other resource exploration resulted in the development and use of railroads, roads, river steamboats, and (later) aircraft to serve the transportation needs. As the inevitable bust followed the boom, the technology of the day was left behind on the tundra and in the forests to rust and rot because it was too expensive and too impractical to remove.
MATI was established to give a home to the transportation and industrial remnants and to tell the stories of the people and the machines that opened Alaska to exploration and growth.
MATI’s History
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry (MATI) started in 1967 as the Air Progress Museum. It was a small collection of Alaskan transportation artifacts gathered for the centennial celebration of the United States purchasing Alaska from Russia in 1867. The exhibit was on International Airport Road in Anchorage.
It included six retired railroad cars that brought to Alaska as troop carriers during World War II. They were refurbished and filled with exhibits about Alaska’s transportation history. Those rail cars were named “The Centennial Train.” They became Alaska’s only rolling museum, traveling the rail belt from Seward to Fairbanks. The Centennial Train rested beside the museum for several years.
Fire forced the museum to close its doors in 1973.
Several years later, a determined group of Valley residents arranged for the remains of the museum’s collection, charred aircraft, and The Centennial Train to be moved to Palmer. They hauled all they could preserve to the new location. In 1976, a 15-year non-renewable lease was signed, giving the museum a three-acre corner on the Alaska State Fair grounds. Along with this move came a new name, “The Transportation Museum of Alaska.”
Alaska’s pioneer history proved interesting to visitors. The collection expanded and it became the “Alaska Historical and Transportation Museum.” People enjoyed looking at the old airplanes, trains, and tractors.
In the 1980s, with Alaska oil prosperity at its height, the State Legislature allocated expansion and operating funds to the museum. Governmental funding diminished over the years. The museum now receives no federal, state, or city funding.
The Museum of Alaska Transportation and Industry is now a private, non-profit corporation, governed by a volunteer board of directors. It is funded by museum admissions, gift shop sales, and donations from our members and friends.
MATI moved to its present location at 3800 West Museum Dr in Wasilla in 1992 onto over 20 acres. In addition to a large gallery, we have a train yard, rows and rows of outdoor artifacts, and an exhibit hall. Many of the artifacts in the museum were donated by individuals. Some are on loan to us from the military and other organizations.
MATI’s mission is the collection, conservation, restoration, exhibition, and interpretation of artifacts relating to Alaska’s transportation and industrial history. Education is at our core. The museum’s scope is statewide and the collections reflect an all encompassing journey!
The museum is open from late May through Labor Day during the summer.