[1] The buildings, built at a total cost of US$765,000, and other capital improvements are funded by the Army Transportation Museum Foundation (ATMF).
[2] Since the foundation is prohibited by law from obtaining state or federal grants, private donations are the only funding source.
[6] The exhibits inside the museum building include representative transportation-related materials, presented in a series of dioramas in chronological order.
This operation used 158 tugboats including 74 of the Army's "small tugs" to tow 59 Gooseberry derelict ships to be sunk as breakwalls and the Phoenix caissons and Lobnitz floating piers.
[8] Another exhibit focuses on the Red Ball Express, the massive supply operation that supported Patton's advance after D-Day.
[9] The museum has an extensive Vietnam War exhibit, including a large diorama with the gun truck Eve of Destruction (believed the only surviving Vietnam era gun truck,[10] and named after a protest song[11]), an exhibit depicting a downed UH-1 Iroquois in a rice paddy, as well as bicycles used by the Viet Cong.