The collection began as the Thompson Products Auto Album, which was also founded by Crawford. Crawford explained that when he started collecting the cars, it was simply because it seemed a shame to let them be
scrapped, which was the typical fate of almost all antique machinery at the time. He saw value in saving a few historically significant examples. In 1990, the museum sold off almost 70 automobiles by putting them up for auction with
Sotheby's. To pay down debt, the museum sold or auctioned 44 cars in 2009, 24 of them through
RM Auctions in October. The
deaccessions proceeded over public protest and the objections of Kay Crawford, the widow of founder Frederick C. Crawford. The museum also sold a
Goodyear F2G Corsair it had purchased from Walter Soplata and a
Airco DH.4 originally acquired by Crawford. As of 2018, the museum featured two major exhibits:
Setting the World in Motion, featuring cars and airplanes made in Northeast Ohio
, and
REVolution: The Automobile in America, telling the story of the automobile in America. The museum dismissed its director, Brad Brownell, in 2023 due to disagreements over object use philosophies. == Facilities ==