Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Al Margolis, director of operations at Moffett Field Historical Society and Museum, speaks about the USS Macon at the museum in Mountain View on April 13, 2023. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

April 12 marked an important anniversary for aeronautics: it’s the date that Yuri Gagarin became the first human ever launched into space in 1961.

But this year, the anniversary bore local significance, too, as the 90th anniversary of the establishment of Moffett Federal Airfield.

The airfield’s extensive history — starting in the 1930s as a base for the Navy airship USS Macon, to eventually its handover to NASA Ames in the 1990s — is on display at the Moffett Field Historical Society and Museum. The museum’s impressive collection of artifacts and exhibits are located in a building once used as a recreation room for the Navy in the 1980s, a stone’s throw away from Hangar One.

A Harrier Jump Jet cockpit on display in the Moffett Field Historical Society and Museum in Mountain View on April 13, 2023. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

But beginning this month, the Moffett Field Museum is entering a new era. The museum’s all-volunteer staff have been hard at work for the past six months preparing a series of new, family-friendly exhibits in honor of April’s numerous aeronautical milestones, with a mission to put the museum back on the map.

“For us, it’s kicking us off to a new level,” said Al Margolis, director of operations at the museum.

Starting April 12, the museum began displaying new artifacts on loan from NASA Ames, most notably a moon rock retrieved from the Apollo 15 Mission in 1971. The outer space relic, which will be on display only until April 24, is of such importance to NASA that it must be guarded by a volunteer at all times and stowed away in a safe every night.

A moon rock retrieved from the Apollo 15 Mission in 1971 on display in the Moffett Field Historical Society and Museum in Mountain View on April 13, 2023. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

“I am the only one allowed to know the combination,” Margolis said.

Though the moon rock will only be at the museum for the next couple weeks, the museum’s permanent NASA Ames displays are here to stay, including a Harrier Jump Jet cockpit, three NASA research aircraft displayed in the museum’s Air Park, and rare models of g-force simulators used to prepare astronauts for space flight.

The museum is additionally hosting a series of interactive STEM exhibits and events, including a drone flying station that Margolis said has been a big hit so far with young museum-goers.

Moffett Field’s rich history — “from Navy to NASA,” as the museum dubs it — is also on permanent display, which visitors can learn more about by scheduling a tour with a volunteer docent. When Moffett Field Historical Society President Tom Spink gives his tour, it comes with a touch of lived experience.

“I arrived here in 1970 as a 25-year-old kid from Kansas,” said Spink, who served nine years of active duty in the Navy and 21 years in the reserves, experiencing the height of Moffett’s military days firsthand. “Basically, I’ve spent my whole adult life here.”

Moffett Field Historical Society President Tom Spink speaks about the USS Macon at the museum in Mountain View on April 13, 2023. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Margolis and Spink said their vision for the museum is to strike the right balance between honoring the history of Moffett Field and showcasing contemporary STEM innovation.

The Moffett Field Museum is open to the public Wednesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Since it’s located on a federal airfield, visitors are required to present identification at the gate. The Museum can be found on Severyns Avenue in Mountain View, building 126.

  • 103474_original
  • 103474_original
  • 103475_original
  • 103475_original
  • 103476_original
  • 103476_original
  • 103477_original
  • 103477_original

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. Nice. Even before this it was a cool little museum packed with all kinds of stuff I’d never seen including Bay Area relevant.

    This is a well-kept secret—take the kids to hit golf balls on the NASA driving range (stop by the clubhouse to buy some NASA logo golf balls and fries), visit the Moffett Museum and the Space Bar for hamburgers (have they started making the burgers again? they closed during the pandemic—so good and best veggie burgers because of the add ons), don’t forget the visitors center and gift shop.

Leave a comment