Route 66 Car Museum
Springfield, MO
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Attending the Birthplace of Route 66 Festival in this city? traveling to Branson? traveling via the Mother Road on your way to California?
Tour buses and tour groups can visit the Route 66 Car Museum to see antique cars in the heart of America.
Visitors to the Route 66 Car Museum in Springfield are treated with an immersive experience that showcases and preserves some of history’s most beautiful automobiles. This world-class museum is open for all ages, proudly serving guests from around the globe! Don’t hesitate—contact us ahead on your tour today so we can show you’re great appreciation when visiting our humble little home away from home sweet hometown.
In the 20,000 square foot Route 66 Car Museum, there is a collection of 70 sports cars, classics from 1907 to 1980, and vehicles from motion pictures. exposing the public to a passion. The privately owned Route 66 Car Museum is situated along the illustrious and historic Route 66.
When Guy Mace acquired his first Jaguar in 1990, he began to collect. Since then, the collection has expanded to 75 vehicles that “strike a fancy.” With automobiles from the early brass era to those utilized in movies, such the Gotham Roadster, this collection is sure to have something for every museum visitor’s preference. The museum is home to seven Jaguars, two Rolls Royces, a 1963 Morgan formerly driven by General Norman Schwarzkopf during Desert Storm, as well as the fabled truck from Henry Fonda’s “Grapes of Wrath.” On display are several really distinctive vintage vehicles. The 1936 Horch, one of roughly 50 vehicles delivered to the German government in 1937 for use by general officers in the military, is noteworthy.
In the Prewar Preservation Class of the 2014 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, this Horch took second place. Having been kept in South Dakota for more than 50 years, it is entirely original. Along with several other unique vehicles from that era on exhibit, two further classics in the collection—the 1933 Auburn 12 and the 1926 Kissel Brougham, both National First Prize winners of the Antique Automobile Club of America (AACA)—represent the zenith of 1920s and 1930s classics.
Our collection includes rare, vintage cars from nearly a century ago. There’s a high chance you won’t see any of these models, which range from 1907 to 2005, on the road anytime soon.
Take a stroll through automotive history and a piece of Americana at the Route 66 Car Museum in Springfield, Missouri, which features vehicles ranging from small roadsters to large station wagons.