Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Museum |
39216 Jackson, MS, United States of America (USA) (Mississippi) |
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Address |
1150 Lakeland Drive
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Floor area | unfortunately not known yet |
Opening times
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Monday – Saturday, 9am – 5pm (closed on many holidays) Train and Carousel Rides: 10am – 3pm |
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Status from 11/2017
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Adults: $5; Senior Adults, Military: $4; Ages 3-18: $4 Train Rides: $1 per person Carousel Rides – ages 5 and under: $1 per person |
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Contact |
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Homepage | www.msagmuseum.org |
Location / Directions |
Jackson, officially the City of Jackson, is the capital city and largest urban center of the U.S. state of Mississippi. Amtrak, the national passenger rail system, provides service to Jackson. The Amtrak station is located at 300 West Capitol Street. The southbound City of New Orleans provides service from Jackson to New Orleans and some points between; it leaves at 11:20 a.m. and arrives in New Orleans about 3:30 p.m. The northbound City of New Orleans provides service from Jackson to Memphis, Carbondale, Champaign-Urbana, Chicago, and some points between. The Museum is centrally located in Jackson on the corner of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55. Take exit 98B off Interstate 55. Go one block east on Lakeland. Turn left on Cool Papa Bell Drive. Museum parking is located in this lot, along with the Crawdad Hole, Museum Café. |
Description | Mission The ways farmers and foresters have been able to receive and ship products have greatly influenced their lifestyles; therefore, the Museum tells their story through the medium of transportation. The Museum is divided into 3 major sections: Water, Railroad, and Road. Each of these is subdivided into an agricultural and a forestry section. The Heritage Center tour ends with the National Agricultural Aviation Museum and a section of contemporary agricultural and forestry industries. Small Town Mississippi From the 1820s until recent decades, Mississippi agriculture, and that of much of the South, was centered around the production of cotton. During the antebellum period, cotton was viewed as the social and economic focus of life. The wealth of planters was consumed in the purchase of land, slaves, tariffs, freight costs, and commissions. Train Exhibit A portion of the rail section of the Agriculture and Forestry Museum is represented by three model railroad layouts. The layouts represent railroading in the late 1960s and early 1970s when steam locomotives were nearly replaced with modern diesel-electrics using the popular HO and O scale gauges. The layouts depict the contribution of railroads to the development of agriculture and commerce in Mississippi. The O Gauge layout represents the varied topography of Mississippi along the Mississippi River. Also exhibited in this area is a full scale exhibit of a caboose. Visitors can get an appreciation of the size of prototype trains and, perhaps, imagine the feeling of standing on the porch of the caboose as the miles roll by. The HO Scale layout depicts Mississippi with a city area, logging area, a small rural town, catfish ponds, and fields of production agriculture. Also shown are many of the rail side industries of the era including cotton gins, sawmills, vegetable shipping warehouses, and railcar icing facilities. Nature Trail The Museum’s Nature Trail educates visitors on how the environment plays an important role in agriculture and how the environment has always been a friend to the farmer. National Agricultural Aviation Museum Covering more than 5,000 square feet, the National Agricultural Aviation Museum’s floorspace and airspace provides a comprehensive and fascinating look at an industry that literally reshaped the history of agriculture. On display are actual planes that once flew over Southern farms and plantations complimented by an informative video and a series of colorful photographs and panels. The Fitzgerald Collection One of the most enchanting exhibits at the Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Museum is often overlooked because it is off-the-beaten path behind the Heritage Center. All who make their way down are always glad they came and want to visit again. Everything in the building was once the prized treasure of the Fitzgeralds of Inverness, Mississippi. Carousel Our classic American carousel, manufactured by the Allan-Herschell Company of North Tonawanda, New York, in 1928, has been located at the Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Museum since 1988 |
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