THE LARGEST PUBLIC SIGN MUSEUM IN AMERICA

EXPLORE THE MUSEUM’S COLLECTIONS

Permanent Collection: please pardon our dust! The online database is temporarily down for maintenance. Check back soon for updates.

Library & Resource Center Collection: with more than 1,000 sign-related books and research materials, the Sign Museum Library is open by appointment only and is free with Museum admission. Click here to learn more.

THE STORY

The American Sign Museum promotes sign preservation and restoration by displaying nearly 100 years of signage. We preserve and protect American history and pay homage to the artistry and craftsmanship of days gone by. The collection honors an often overlooked part of our culture that hides in plain sight as part of our daily lives.

Tod Swormstedt spent 26 years on the staff of Signs of the Times magazine, which was founded in 1906. He became the fourth-generation editor of the “bible of the sign industry.” Tod parlayed all of his knowledge and contacts into a self-proclaimed “mid-life crisis project” that would eventually become the American Sign Museum.

In 1999, Tod founded the National Signs of the Times Museum. With accelerating support, the Museum was renamed and re-opened as the American Sign Museum in May 2005. Its temporary home within an arts center sufficed for several years, but growing pains ensued. The magnificent McDonald’s and Holiday Inn signs couldn’t be displayed to their full heights, and the collection was growing rapidly.

Tod began searching for a more permanent home for the ever-expanding collection. He needed a space that could fulfill his vision for an interactive Museum experience.  He found the Museum’s new home in Camp Washington, an appropriately historic area of Cincinnati, at the century-old Oesterlein Machine Company-Fashion Frocks, Inc. Complex. Its doors opened in June 2012.

THE MISSION

To celebrate the rich history of American signage through preservation and education.

THE VISION

The American Sign Museum is the premier institution for preserving historic signs and promoting the contributions the sign industry makes to commerce, culture, and the American landscape.

MEET THE TEAM

Jennifer Abramis – Director of Finance and Human Resources
513-701-2187
jabramis@americansignmuseum.org

Casey Goldman-Davis – Curator of Collections and Programming
513-701-2182
cgoldman-davis@americansignmuseum.org

Erin Holland – Manager of Digital Communications and Engagement
513-701-2185
eholland@americansignmuseum.org

Kirk Keevert – Events Manager
513-701-2184
kkeevert@americansignmuseum.org

Jesse Sandman – Manager of Guest Experience
513-701-2191
jsandman@americansignmuseum.org

Tod Swormstedt – Founder
513-701-2183
tswormstedt@americansignmuseum.org

CAREERS

Neonworks of Cincinnati

Friend of the Museum, Neonworks of Cincinnati is Cincinnati’s only full-time neon sign shop! They create custom signs for commercial and residential use, and are located right inside of our building! Come watch one of the skilled craftsman create or repair neon signs during one of our weekday tours. Neon tube bending is one of the few crafts that can’t be replicated with automation! Interested in getting a custom sign for commercial or residential use? They do that, too!

Contact them at 513-771-8559 to find out more.

Wednesday through Friday watch the owners of Neonworks create neon signs, and maybe have a chat with them after the museum’s guided tour. Read about them in this Cincinnati Magazine article.