The Aurora Regional Fire Museum is located in Aurora's fully restored 1894 Central Fire Station and features a variety of family-friendly, hands-on, interactive exhibits, designed to educate and entertain.
The independent, non-profit, museum attracts between five and seven thousand visitors annually from a wide geographic area. The museum also offers group tours, hosts a variety of lectures and educational programs in it's fifty-seat auditorium, and participates in numerous special events, parades, community festivals.
The museum's primary exhibit, "Getting There, Getting Water, Getting Rescued" traces the evolution of the tools and technology used by firefighters. Visitors can pass a leather fire bucket from the early 1800s. See the horse stalls and the "real" fire horses. Marvel at the strange looking Vajen-Bader smoke mask. See and hear to how modern fire apparatus clears the streets with sirens, air horns, and devices that change traffic lights green. Watch vintage film clips of firefighters and fire engines on five video touch-screens.
The Aurora Regional Fire Museum's collection is comprised of five pieces of fire apparatus (ranging from the 1850s through the 1940s), 5,000 artifacts, and over 10,000 photographs and archival documents in a research collection.