Sails to Rails Museum Eintritt





Beschreibung
Entdecken Sie dieses hochmoderne Museum in der historischen Key West Bight mit praktischen Exponaten, Rohmaterial, einzigartigen Artefakten und dem einzigen maßstabsgetreuen Modell von Fort Jefferson im Dry Tortugas National Park. Entdecken Sie auf Ihrer Reise durch diese interaktive Zeitleiste der Geschichte von Key West die Geschichte des Schwammfangs, der Schildkröte, des Fischfangs, der Zigarrenherstellung und des Tourismus, die Key West auf die Landkarte gebracht haben. Berühren Sie einen echten Silberbarren der spanischen Galeone Nuestra Senora de Atocha, der 1522 während eines Hurrikans vor Key West voller Gold, Silber und Smaragde versank. Lernen Sie Henry Flagler, John D. Rockefellers Partner für Standard Oil, im Original-Zahlmeisterbahnwagen der Florida East Coast (FEC) Railway. Sehen Sie sich im Maggie Atwell House die einzige noch erhaltene Holzkonstruktion der FEC an und erfahren Sie mehr über die bahnbrechenden Arbeiten beim Bau der Eisenbahn über dem offenen Ozean und die von Mücken befallenen Mangrovensümpfe der Florida Keys.
Tour-Optionen
Reiseverlauf
Gäste, die Sails to Rails besuchen, werden durch das Zeitalter des Segels reisen, eine Zeit, in der Großsegler von 1500 bis Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts durch die tückischen Gewässer der Karibik, des Golfs von Mexiko und der Florida Keys fuhren. Diese Gewässer waren einst mit schatzreichen spanischen Galeonen, gefürchteten Piraten, Handelsschiffen und vielem mehr gefüllt, als die Neue Welt ihren Reichtum allen bekannt machte, die ihre Gewässer segelten. Sie werden auch etwas über die Zeit in Amerika erfahren, als Eisenbahnen die Grenzen von öffneten eine aufstrebende Nation. Ein Besuch bei Sails to Rails ist eine der umfassendsten Übersichten über die Geschichte von Florida Keys und Key West, die ein Besucher erhalten kann. Dieses Museum ist eine der Hauptattraktionen in Key West für Erwachsene und Kinder jeden Alters!
Highlights
Was ist inklusive
Bewertungen der Reisenden
Wichtige Informationen
- Rollstuhlgerechter Zugang
- Kleinkinder können in einem Kinderwagen gefahren werden.
- Begleittiere erlaubt
- In der Umgebung sind öffentliche Verkehrsmittel verfügbar.
- Alle Bereiche und Böden sind rollstuhlgerecht.
- Für alle Fitnesslevel geeignet
Bewertungen(10)
Great museum! Gives you the lowdown on Key West from the sea to the rails. Fascinating history. All self guided so you can take your time well worth the price of admission, which is very reasonable.
My husband and I enjoy going to history museums. We were pleasantly surprised by the huge amount of information at this museum on all the history of ship wreckers, and the development of Key West since the 1600 and beyond! Very informative.
We were familiar with Flagler and his railroad adventures so we thought we’d take a more in-depth look inside this museum. There is a parking lot right across the street and building is handicapped accessible. When you walk in you have a beautiful model of the fort located at the Dry Tortugas. It really is fantastic. The you enter the rather small exhibit area about what Key West supplied to the north, a timeline of the railroad, some fun ship information, and a great introduction to the sponge market. Next you enter an outside area that has a great movie about Flagler and his dream of a railway to Key West. You then visit a replica of a rail car followed by a restored house used during the building of the railway. Museum is small but full of very interesting information. Would be better if it all was airconditioned but we survived.
If you like history and one man’s perseverance to achieve a valuable goal. Easy visit and nice way to duck out of sun.
It’s a good thing to do while waiting for the Trolley. (I am really glad we did not buy special tickets just to come into the museum.) It is informative; however you learn a lot of the same information in other museums. So you are getting some repetition The woman who checks you in is as lovely as can be and knows the schedule for both the trolley and the train. (Down to the minute.)
Been on a Flagler kick, and the southernmost terminal was a must-visit. Small museum but good info. Spent about an hour and a half. Did a wonderful job explaining Flagler's vision and the many engineering innovations required to achieve it. A key question the museum did not address, and I wish it did, is answering why the railroad failed as a business enterprise after it was built (before the 1935 hurricane). Flagler had envisioned it as being part of the Panama Canal transportation chain, but it didn't play out that way. Why?
I had high hopes for this museum and it did not disappoint. In addition to all of the artifacts, the short films were also very interesting. Spent well over an hour here. Highly recommend.
We spent about an hour and a half here learning about Key West’s origins and development over time. There are a number of well done exhibits, we especially enjoyed the timeline that correlated what was happening in the broader world to what was happening in Ke y West. Likely your best source of information about Flagler’s Overseas Railway short of reading a book on it. This was a delightful small town museum with a broader regional reach. Well worth your time, highly recommended!
I saw the Shipwreck Treasure Museum and Sails to Rails (formerly Flagler Station) Museum on the same day. They both explain how shipwreck salvaging created the wealth in Key West, and the railroad part explained how Standard Oil business partner to John Rockefeller, Henry Flagler, built the East Coast Railroad Extension from 1905-1912, connecting all the Florida Keys together through 42 bridges to Key West. Both the Museums are very interesting in understanding how the Florida Keys and Key West developed. I would recommend this museum.
Loved this museum. Great history lesson. The facility was exceptionally inviting, clean and full of great information.



