The Museum closed on September 5, 2006 for major
architectural renovations and is scheduled to reopen by fall
2008.
America on the Move highlights the Smithsonians
unparalleled and extremely popular transportation collections
in new and creative ways. Using multimedia technology, immersive
environments, and other theatrical techniques, America on
the Move brings ships, trains, trucks, and automobiles back
to lifeor, more accurately, back to history. See these artifacts
as they once were: moving people and products from place to place,
a vital part of the nations transportation system, a vital
part of our business, social, and cultural history.
As you travel through America on the Move, you will encounter vehicles in historical vignettes, each set in a particular place and time between 1876 and 2000. Become a part of the crowd welcoming the Jupiter locomotive to Santa Cruz, California, in 1876. Watch as H. Nelson Jackson and Sewall Crocker try to pull their car out of the mud as they race to be the first to drive an automobile across the country in 1903. Come aboard a ship in New York Harbor. Explore the role of the railroads in our national life as you admire the 92-foot Southern Railway locomotive 1401 in 1920s Salisbury, North Carolina. Watch a family move into suburban Park Forest, Illinois, in the 1950s, and ride a Chicago L rapid-transit car into the city. Stand on the dock of Oaklands container port in the 1970s and find out how containers changed dock work and the way companies do business. In theseand in all the exhibitions settingssights, sounds, and other sensations will transport you back in time.
Special Events
There are currently no special events scheduled for this exhibition.
Exhibit Guides
In the Learning Resources section of this site, you will find printable exhibition guides for families with children, activities for school groups, details on arranging a school-group visit to the Museum, as well as related reading material and web links.