Tampa Bay Automobile Museum

27°51′8.50″N 82°40′44″W / 27.8523611°N 82.67889°W / 27.8523611; -82.67889TypeAutomotiveCollectionsAutomotive engineering innovations, early 20th century art.Collection size90 cars
Automobilia, over 200 art and lithography displaysDirectorAlan MorinPresidentAlain CerfCuratorOlivier CerfWebsitetbauto.org

The Tampa Bay Automobile Museum, located in Pinellas Park, Florida in the Tampa Bay Area, displays historic automobiles from the 20th century. All of the vehicles displayed are from the collection of Alain Cerf, a French entrepreneur and the Cerf family.

The collection is focused on innovative engineering. This includes rare front-wheel drive cars from 1899-1937, Tatra air-cooled V8 rear engine cars, rear-engine Mercedes-Benz, Citroën cars, the only 1965 original all wheel drive Ford Mustang, electric and hybrid cars from the early 1900's, early two and valveless four stroke engines, the only surviving car by French engineer Émile Claveau, and a unique working full-scale replica of the first self-propelled mechanical vehicle, the steam powered Fardier of Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot.[1]

Gallery

  • Fardier de Cugnot
    Fardier de Cugnot
  • 1929 Ruxton
    1929 Ruxton
  • 1956 Claveau
    1956 Claveau
  • 1967 Tatra 603
    1967 Tatra 603
  • 1973 Citroën SM
  • 1929 Ford Model A Gazogene
    1929 Ford Model A Gazogene
  • 1928 Tatra
    1928 Tatra
  • 1953 Hotchkiss Gregoire Coupe
    1953 Hotchkiss Gregoire Coupe
  • Tatraplan
    Tatraplan
  • Tatra T97
    Tatra T97
  • Ruxton
    Ruxton
  • DKW Meisterklasse
    DKW Meisterklasse
  • Amilcar Compound
    Amilcar Compound
  • 1933 Derby V8
    1933 Derby V8
  • Chenard-Walcker T9T
    Chenard-Walcker T9T
  • Citroën 2CV Sahara
  • 1965 Ford Mustang AWD
    1965 Ford Mustang AWD
  • Tatra T75
    Tatra T75
  • Jensen 541 Prototype
    Jensen 541 Prototype
  • Hanomag Kommissbrot
    Hanomag Kommissbrot
  • 1950 Talbot-Lago
  • Peugeot Darl'Mat

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tampa Bay Automobile Museum.
  1. ^ Fardier replica at the Tampa Bay Automobile Museum Archived 2011-11-07 at the Wayback Machine