Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum

The Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum has 200+ tractors, 120+ trucks, 25+ cars and vintage Fire Trucks.

You’ll experience the last century of agricultural heritage incorporating fully restored antique farm tractors, ongoing restoration projects, vintage road trucks, and collectible cars.

Founder Keith Jones and museum curator Alan “Bones” Stone will delight you with their hospitality and appreciation of the rich heritage of agriculture and automotive transport.

Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum is conveniently located just 30 minutes from Richmond, Virginia. Encompassing more than 125,000 square feet, the Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum is no ordinary museum. It’s cool, it’s combustive, and guarantees to take you on an exhilarating walk down memory lane. Plus you can eat at Keystone Grill before or after your visit.

880 W Roslyn Rd
Colonial Heights, VA 23834
P: 804-524-0020
Email: info@keystonetractorworks.com

Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum Admission:

$15 for adults ($1 off for seniors 62+ and retired military
$10 for Active Duty Military
$10 for students (6-17)
Free for Children 5 & under w/paid adult admission.

Plan: 1-2 hr

Keystone Antique Truck & Tractor Museum Hours:

Daily 9 am – 5 pm

keystonetractorworks.com

Image via https://www.facebook.com/pg/KeystoneTractorWorks/

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

xeric watchharvest hostsGarage Style Magazinesmart aftorie art

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

Jack Sisemore RV Museum

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

Jack Sisemore RV Museum

The Jack Sisemore RV Museum is part of the Jack Sisemore Traveland RV dealership, which also offers RV storage.

The Sisemore’s have been collecting and restoring unusual vintage RVs for years. Some of the RVs in their collection include the Flxible Bus from the movie RV which was released in 2006, and Stared Robin Williams. Also, the 1st Itasca motor home ever built, the oldest Fleetwood in existence, and many other RVs from the 30s through the 70s.

14501 I-27,
Amarillo, TX 79119
P: 
806-690-3377

Jack Sisemore RV Museum Admission:

Free
Plan: 1hr

Jack Sisemore RV Museum Hours:

Thursday – Saturday 10 am – 3 pm

rvmuseum.net

Image via Steve Judkins

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

xeric watchwp engineWilbur Watchsmart afharvest hosts

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

International Towing & Recovery Museum

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

International Towing & Recovery Museum

The International Towing & Recovery Hall Of Fame and Museum features restored antique wreckers and equipment from the tow truck industry. The museum also displays related toys, tools, equipment, and pictorial histories.

3315 Broad St
Chattanooga, TN 37408
P: 
423-267-3132
Email: officemanager@towingmuseum.com

International Towing & Recovery Hall Of Fame and Museum Admission:

Adults – $10.00
Seniors (55 or older) – $9.00
Military – $8.50
AAA – $8.50
Children 6 – 14 – $6.00
Children under 5 are free.
Plan: 1-2hr

International Towing & Recovery Hall Of Fame and Museum Hours:

Tuesday – Thursday 9 am – 5 pm
Friday 9 am – 4 pm
Saturday 9 am – 5 pm
Sunday 10 am – 2 pm

towingmuseum.com

Image via Sean Mathis

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

garage decorhttps://refer.americancollectors.com/l/1SEANMATHIS34/harvest hostsboondockersGarage Style Magazine

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

International Monster Truck Museum and Hall of Fame

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

International Monster Truck Museum and Hall of Fame

The International Monster Truck Museum & Hall of Fame was established in 2010 with the mission of collecting and archiving the history of the monster truck sport and related aspects of the high-performance aftermarket, focusing on capturing history from the surviving pioneers and legends. Each year, the International Monster Truck Museum will honor the most accomplished and significant people in the history of monster trucks with induction into its Hall of Fame.

Through the accumulation of vehicles, oral histories, videos and still images, the International Monster Truck Museum & Hall of Fame will provide a documented history and an entertaining and educational retrospective display about the birth and growth of a purely North American year round motor sport that is geared toward the entire family and the industry it launched for future generations.

541 W Main St,
Butler, IN 46721
P:
260-837-2435
Email: info@monstermuseum.org

International Monster Truck Museum and Hall of Fame Admission:

Adults: $5
3 and under: Free

Plan: 1hr

International Monster Truck Museum and Hall of Fame Hours:

Wednesday – Friday 10 am – 6 pm
Saturday 9 am – 5 pm
Sunday 1 pm – 5 pm

monstermuseum.org

Image via https://www.facebook.com/MonsterMuseum

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

garage decorharvest hostsboondockersWilbur Watchxeric watch

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

Haul of Fame Trucking Museum

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

Haul of Fame Trucking Museum

The Haul of Fame Trucking Museum was once a massive collection of old big rigs and big trucks. Today the collection is a fraction of the size it once was, but there are still plenty of old trucks to see.  This museum is not your traditional museum and is more of a yard full of old trucks.  If you’re not afraid to get a little dirty and walk around check this place out, just make sure to call ahead of time to ensure you don’t waste your time.

133 Packer Rd,
Canterbury, CT 06331
P: (860) 546-6733

Haul of Fame Trucking Museum Admission:

Free

Plan: 1 hour

Haul of Fame Trucking Museum Hours:

Wednesday 9 am – 3 pm

Image via Ricky Taylor

 

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

Wilbur WatchGarage Style Magazinetorie artgarage decorwp engine

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

Federal Armored Museum

  1. Home
  2.  » Category: "Bus, RV, Big Rig"

Federal Armored Museum

The Federal Armored Museum is located north of Baltimore near Timonium, MD. This small museum was started by James L. Dunbar Sr., the founder of Dunbar Armored and the author of Bulletproof, a history of the armored transport industry. After Brink’s Inc. bought Dunbar Armored in August 2018, Dunbar devoted his time to creating a museum about the Dunbar family’s armored transport companies near his company’s former headquarters in Hunt Valley. It’s open by appointment only via the website contact form or phone. A friend and I went on a tour in November 2023, guided by two former Dunbar employees who gave us a lot of information and anecdotes about the company and the Dunbar family.

The museum takes its name from the original name of James L. Dunbar Sr.’s business, Federal Armored Express, which he opened in 1956 with a single GMC armored truck. His father, George W. Dunbar Sr., started the first armored transport company in New England in Connecticut, also with a single truck, in 1923 as the partnership of Mercer and Dunbar. Mr. Mercer and Mr. Dunbar worked in a car dealership and one day an armored truck en route for delivery to a buyer in New York was towed to the dealership for repair.

Dunbar convinced the owner to sell the truck needing repair to him and started his business. That meant his son James, who the father didn’t want to see leave the family business to start his own, couldn’t use the Dunbar name as long as other security companies carried it. Purolator bought Mercer and Dunbar in 1971, but it wasn’t until 1996 that James Dunbar was able to rename his company when the rest of the family businesses were sold (some to him). James Dunbar Sr. grew his company to be the fourth-largest money management company in the US and the largest independent armored car company with 1600 trucks at the time it was sold to Brink’s. Several other security businesses still carry the Dunbar name and are led by his son Kevin. James Dunbar Sr. died in 2020, but the museum he began is part of his legacy.

The highlights of the museum are four vintage armored trucks. The largest one is the first armored car owned by George Dunbar’s Mercer and Dunbar Armored Car Service. Only the armored body remains from the first truck; originally it was mounted on a 1923 Federal truck chassis and was switched to the current 1937 International chassis when the original wore out. There’s another Mercer and Dunbar truck from the 1920s with a curious truncated armored body that’s so small it might have been an escort vehicle rather than a money transport. In the early days of the industry, bank couriers actually carried the money and the armored car company merely provided transportation and guards without actually storing the funds in transit, as they did later.

The first truck from James Dunbar’s business, Federal Armored Express, is also on display. It’s a 1956 GMC-badged truck on a Chevrolet 3800 chassis. Finally, there’s a contemporary Dunbar Armored truck from 1996. Some of these red and white trucks can still be seen in the Baltimore area with Brink’s signs over the former Dunbar lettering. James Dunbar’s trucks were painted blue and white until 1976, when he switched to red and white (he had admired Wells Fargo’s red and white trucks as a boy). The US Postal Service complained for years about the similar color scheme of the early trucks, which Dunbar had selected on purpose because he thought his trucks were less likely to be robbed if they were mistaken for Post Office vehicles. According to the museum information, the similarity occasionally led people to attempt to give mail to Federal Armored drivers as they made their rounds!

In addition to the vehicles, memorabilia, news articles, photos and collectibles about the company and its founder are displayed. Several large models of armored trucks and a number of diecast models of Federal Armored, Dunbar and other companies’ trucks are included in the museum. One of the large models is a prototype for four full-size Mercer and Dunbar trucks built in 1947 incorporating all the latest security elements. This was the first year that Dunbar installed two-way radios in his trucks, a first in the industry.

In a public relations move, Robert S. Dunbar, President of Dunbar Guard Security, donated the 1947 model to be used to collect funds to fight cancer. A slot was cut in the roof of the model and it was placed in the lobby of the Hartford (CT) National Bank. After Purolator bought Mercer and Dunbar, James G. Dunbar Sr. began a long search for the model and finally found it after Loomis bought Purolator. He had it restored to its present condition, with the slot covered over and painted in the original green Mercer and Dunbar color.

A large model of a red and white Dunbar truck and another beautifully detailed, large-scale model of the company’s 1000th truck also are in the collection. Other interesting model trucks are a wooden replica of the 1923/37 armored truck on display and a bronze sculpture of a Dunbar truck commissioned as a gift to Mr. Dunbar from his employees. (The sculpture was made by Don Hunt, a well-known sculptor of Western subjects. Dunbar was an avid collector of Western art and a small room in the museum is devoted to that collection.)

P: 443-330-5069

Federal Armored Museum Admission:

Adults $10
Kids (5-18) $5
Under 5 free

Plan: 1hr

Federal Armored Museum Hours:

By Appointment HERE

federalarmoredmuseum.com

Federal Armored Museum

Image via Dick Williams

.

Sign up for updates

Find Museums By Area

futura trailerstorie artshop miles through timehttps://refer.americancollectors.com/l/1SEANMATHIS34/Wilbur Watch

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

automotive museum guide

get updates

Sign up to get updates about automotive museums right to your mailbox. Don't miss a thing. It's FREE.

Stay up to Update

Learn about North America's Automotive Museums you can visit.

Translate »