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Antique
Gas & Steam Engine Museum
2040 N. Sante Fe Ave.,
Vista, CA
(760) 941-1791, (800) 5-TRACTOR (587-2286).
www.agsem.com
Nestled on 55 acres of rolling farm
ground in Vista, California, and featuring collections of over
20,000 items from the 1849-1949 era; The Antique Gas & Steam
Engine Museum, collects, preserves and displays examples of
mechanical ingenuity and crafts associated with the early days of
the American farm and rural community. Exhibits include farm
equipment from horse drawn through modern row crop equipment. The
Museum offers educational and recreational opportunities to the
public through exhibits, demonstrations, activities and programs
displaying the art of invention fulfilling necessity.
Acknowledging the past provides direction for the future. For
a virtual tour of the Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum, please
click here.
Spring and Fall Harvest Fair, Threshing Bee,
Antique Tractor and Engine Shows: Unique from
traditional static museums, the Museum's collections are
maintained in operating condition, with select pieces being
demonstrated in conjunction with special events such as the Spring
and Fall Harvest Fair, Threshing Bee, Antique Tractor and Engine
Shows, which are held the third and fourth
weekends of June and October. These events offer visitors the rare
opportunity to see crops taken from the field through to the
kitchen. Traditional crafts and trades include farriers, weavers,
soap and rope makers, broom makers and woodcarvers. Each year they
grow a crop of winter wheat, demonstrating local dry land farming
techniques. During the Harvest Fairs, they demonstrate harvesting
and shocking. The Gristmill grinds crops into flour that you may
purchase at a reasonable cost. During the summer months they grow
a crop of irrigated Sorghum Cane, which is harvested and processed
into Molasses, during the Fall Harvest Fair.
Buildings
& Exhibits:
- The Farmhouse: Just
as in the 19th century, the Farmhouse is the center of activity
during the Harvest Fairs and Shows. In the country kitchen
volunteers show what a farm wife did. Using cold food storage
options from ice boxes to electric refrigerators; coal and wood
burning stoves, to gas and electric. Volunteers prepare fresh
bread and cookies, and there are tasty complimentary samples. The
gas lighted parlor volunteers show how a farm woman spent her days
- sewing clothing for the family, quilt making, on foot treadle
sewing machines. There are samples of leisure and recreational
activities from sitting and reading by kerosene lamp, playing
board games, foot pumped organ music, to radio.
- Museum Weavers: The Museum
Weavers maintain one of the finest collections of handlooms of the
West Coast dating from the Civil War era to present.
- The Blacksmith, Farrier and
Wheelwright Shops: On the farm there is a Blacksmith
shop and a Wheelwright shop which features steam, gas, stationary
and mobile industrial power units. The blacksmith manufactured and
repaired metal items, the Farrier made fitted shoes for horses,
and the wheelwright built and repaired wheels or wood items.
- The Museum
Gift Shop: Stop by the Gift Shop and you'll find an
incredible selection of tractor and farm related items including
books and cookbooks such as the Museum's own cookbook called 'Home
Made Cooking Good 'Nuff for Sharing', toys and puzzles, T-shirts and hats, kitchen
utensils and bake ware, home decor items, collector signs and wall
art, clocks, Christmas ornaments and decorations, pins and
jewelry, windsocks and flags, and gifts from the Blacksmith Shop.
- Harvest Equipment:
Large-scale farming depended on the development of mechanical
harvesting. Examples of several different systems are on display,
with the largest being the red 1917 Holt Hillside Harvester built
in Stockton, California.
- Farm Tractors & Equipment:
The Museum features well over 100 examples of the evolution of the
farm tractor and implements - mostly in running condition.
- Gas Engine Row: These
versatile engines provided power to grind grain, pump water,
generate electricity and more. See the Museum's large three
cylinder Fairbanks Morse, which was the first electric power plant
on Catalina Island, California. Other examples in the row include
powered water pumps, air compressors, and mine hoists.
- Steam Engine Row: See the
several examples of steam engines including the large 300
horsepower Corliss used to power the Holly Sugar Mill in Santa
Ana, California.
- The Museum Building: Home
to early farm and household equipment, automobiles and stationary
engines.
- The Railroad & Guajome
Gulch: As the railroad lines tied the nation together,
travel and communication were improved for everyone in its path.
It also made it possible to ship goods inexpensively. See the
Museum's scale locomotive which is modeled after a branch line
freight locomotive of the turn-of-the-century.
- The Short Track Crew:
Features model railroad exhibits to portray the American railroads
in their heyday. The Crew maintains a large modular N scale
layout, as well as model locomotives and rolling stock that depict
the many facets and operations of American railroading.
In the Movies on and TV:
Numerous documentaries focused on the Museums collections have
been filmed for movies, television and the video market. The
Museum is consistently featured in books and calendars sold
through collector's groups and major booksellers. In addition,
videos of the Threshing Bee Antique Engine and Tractor Shows are
sold nationwide. Watch for our equipment in the movies and made
for television productions including Stargate, Mulholland Falls,
LA Confidential, Pearl Harbor, the HBO Series Carnivale, Tremors 4
and The Time Machine; just to name a few.
Classes and Programs:
The Museum has
educational programs from pre-school through college internship
studies. Internship studies in Museumology, Collections Management
and Small Business Administration are also offered. It hosts a Boy
Scout troop, and is the setting for studies and projects by a wide
variety of groups ranging from 4-H to Head Start and ARC.
- School Days: The Museum's elementary
program, School Days, continues to expand to meet demand.
Museum educator Ms. Whimplewort introduces children to country
living in the early 1900's through games, crafts & stories.
'Cooking with Ms. Whimplewort', teaches children about the busy
activities that take place in the Farmhouse, and also teaches
them a little cooking. This program takes place in the Museum
Farmhouse. Christmas on the Farm is a program that celebrates an
Old Fashion Christmas, where students will hear where some of
their favorite Christmas traditions began, and compare a farmers
holiday to their own. Students will be able to make a couple of
gifts for their family. - Blacksmithing Classes: The
Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum & the California Blacksmith
Association offer three levels of Blacksmithing Classes at the
Museum. Classes are open to anyone interested including
first-timers who would like to check out the craft.
- Museum Weavers: Since 1999
the Museum Weavers have operated directly under the umbrella of
the Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum. Most of the Museum Weavers
are also active members of the Palomar Handweavers Guild and/or
the San Diego Creative Weavers Guild. This active group teaches
'weaving by doing', and meets each Thursday from 9am-3pm year
around in the Museum's Club Building. All skill levels are welcome
to participate.
Try these Recipes
These recipes are from ‘Farm House Favorites’ & ‘Home Made
Cooking Good Enough for Sharing’, recipe books published by the
Antiques Gas & Steam Engine Museum.
Gingersnap Cookies
Peach Custard
Ice Cream
Antique Gas & Steam Engine Museum Special Events Calendar - 2008
No
dogs, alcohol or unpermitted vehicles allowed on show grounds.
Wear hats and comfortable shoes.
August 22-24: SummerGrass San Diego:
Bluegrass music festival featuring Don Rigsby & Midnight Call;
Bluegrass Etc; The Infamous Stringdusters; Sawmill Road; Pacific
Ocean Bluegrass; Grateful Hooligans; Chris Stuart & Backcountry;
Burnett Family Bluegrass; Virtual Strangers; Lighthouse;
Superstrings; and Highway 76. Enjoy live music, jamming and
music workshops; family fun with kids activities, and a kids
music camp; music and craft vendors; instrument raffles; tasty
food and more. Dry camping available. Info: (858) 679-4854
October 11-12: Vista Gem & Mineral Show
Oct. 18 -19, 25-26 Harvest Fair:
Celebrating
150 years of HOLT and featuring the Ford Model T. Enjoy 50 acres
of fun including the antique equipment parade and working
antique equipment demonstrations; short track ‘n scale model
trains; weaving demonstrations and sales; blacksmithing and
wheelwright; tractor games; wagon rides; heritage village;
vendor booths; food and snacks; and museum gift shop. Quilt
raffle and ford pedal tractor raffle. Live entertainment
includes – Oct. 18 – Michael Chain; Oct. 19 – Lilies of the
West; Oct. 25 – Kahuna Cowboys; Oct. 26 – Bayou Brothers. Dry
camping available by reservation.
Nov. 9: Consignment Auction
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Hours: Museum
is Open Daily 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Closed December 25th &
January 1st Admission:
Children 5 & under Free, ages 6 - 17 $2.00; Adults age 18 -
64, $3.00; Seniors age 65+, $2.00 Higher admissions are charged
for Special Events: Summergrass, Spring & Fall Harvest Fairs,
Civil War Re-Enactments, etc.
Location:
2040 N. Sante Fe Ave., Vista, CA 92083
Tel: (760) 941-1791,
(800) 5-TRACTOR (587-2286).
Web:
www.agsem.com
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Resource
Guide
For more about
Vista, California, click here.
Looking for
the latest in History & Heritage articles &
interviews? Click here.
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History & Heritage Shops & Services, or past
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