Room 4 · Exhibits
Hall of Wonderment
A full indoor ghost town, a working self-playing piano, and taxidermy from polar bear to mountain lion.
This is the room that surprises people who thought they already knew what to expect. The ghost town has multiple full-scale building facades, each with something happening inside. The taxidermy spans Arctic to desert. Somewhere in the middle, a piano plays itself. Most people spend more time in here than they planned.
Featured Artifacts

Benny Binion's Stagecoach
The actual stagecoach from Binion's Horseshoe Hotel & Casino in downtown Las Vegas — home of the original World Series of Poker. Fully restored, fully lettered. Parked inside the ghost town where it belongs.

Polar Bear — Full Mount, Northern Lights Display
A full-size polar bear mount on a simulated Arctic ice field, set against a painted Northern Lights mural. Most visitors to this museum have been driving through desert all day. Nothing quite prepares them for this.

Wells Fargo & Co. Express — Indoor Ghost Town
A full-scale Wells Fargo building facade built inside the museum, with original signage, iron railings, and working lanterns flanking the entrance. This is one of several storefronts in the indoor ghost town. Every window has something happening inside it.
Also on Display

Old West Chapel
A white wooden chapel with stained glass windows and a working bell in the steeple, built as part of the ghost town. Step inside — there are pews, and the light comes through the colored glass exactly as it should.

Bull Moose and Brown Bear — Mountain Diorama
A full-size bull moose mid-stride on a rocky outcrop, with a brown bear behind it, set against a painted mountain landscape. The taxidermy collection spans Arctic to desert — this is the mountain range in between.

Bobcat on Red Rock
A bobcat crouching on a red sandstone outcrop, set against a forest backdrop. The red rock is the same geology you drove through to get here.
Also in this room: a self-playing piano that fills the ghost town with sound. A saloon bar hand-crafted in Italy as an exact replica of a Brunswick original. A jail that is probably the most photographed spot in the museum. Mountain lion. Bison. And more creatures than you'll count in one pass.
The Collection
Built over 30 years. Open now.
This is not an institutional collection. Every piece in this museum was found, authenticated, and acquired by Jason and Nicol Grossman over three decades of collecting. There is no donation wall, no corporate sponsor. Just two people who love American history and culture, and built something remarkable with it.
Buy Tickets — From $12