The Airborne
& Special Operations Museum is run jointly by the non-profit
Museum Foundation, made up of local business, civic and government
leaders, and the Department of the Army. Opened August 2000,
it now stands as a stunning symbol of the teamwork that Fayetteville
and Fort Bragg have developed over the past eighty years.
Located at 100 Bragg Boulevard at the intersection with Hay
Street, the museum is an anchor for downtown revitalization
and a shining example of the local communitys belief
in the importance and viability of this historic part of
the city.
A part
of the U.S. Army Museum System, the museum tells the story
of Army airborne and special operations units from their
1940 origin and movement to the Fayetteville area in March
of 1942, through the present. The 59,000 square-foot, 22.5
million dollar museum houses many rare and impressive artifacts,
including a C-47 Skytrain
airplane suspended from the ceiling, complete with a paratrooper
in the door. A fully restored CG-4A glider, one of only a handful
that remain from WWII, is on display, along with two helicopters,
a Sheridan tank, and a complete collection of uniforms, equipment
and weapons spanning the sixty-year history of this exciting
segment of the armed forces.
While the
exhibit gallery provides a picture of the origins and progression
of airborne and special operations training and warfare,
the museums movie and motion simulator give visitors
an up-close look at what the Armys finest are capable
of today. Narrated by Benjamin Franklin, the exclusive movie Descending
from the Clouds is a larger than life depiction of modern
airborne units in training. For those who need to be in on
the action, a ride on the Pitch, Roll & Yaw Motion Simulator
lets the visitor ride along
as special operations soldiers jump, ski, ride and fly through
high-speed training.
Museum
hours: 10am - 5 pm, Tuesdays through Saturdays, Noon - 5
pm Sundays. Closed Monday; open Federal holiday Mondays.
Admission is free; there is a charge for the movie and motion
simulator. (910) 483-3003.
Click
here to visit the museum web site.
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