Established | 12 September 1992 |
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Location | 6426 40 Avenue Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada |
Coordinates | 52°57′43″N 113°25′04″W / 52.96194°N 113.41778°W |
Type | Agricultural, industrial, transportation |
Director | Noel Ratch[1] |
Curator | |
Architect | RPK Architects |
Owner | Government of Alberta |
Website | reynoldsmuseum |
The Reynolds-Alberta Museum is an agricultural, industrial, and transportation museum in Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada. The museum is situated on an 89-hectare (220-acre) property containing the main museum building, an aviation display hangar, and its storage facility.
The museum was initially conceived by Stan Reynolds, who had amassed a large collection of agricultural machinery, airplanes, and automobiles during the mid-20th century. During the 1980s, Reynolds donated 850 artifacts to the government of Alberta for the purposes of showcasing these items in a public museum. The provincial government opened the Reynolds-Alberta Museum to exhibit these items to the public on 12 September 1992. The institution was named after Reynolds, who eventually donated over 1,500 artifacts to the institution before his death.
The museum collection presently contains over 6,600 agricultural, industrial, and transportation artifacts. The majority of the artifacts are held in the museum's storage facility; although a number of artifacts are either on exhibit in the museum's main building and aviation display hangar, or on tour.