The museum was established in 2003 by Deanie Bishop Parrish and her daughter Nancy Parrish. It opened in a 11,700 sq ft (1,090 m2) 1929 hangar in May 2005.[1][2][3]
A PT-19 was placed on loan to the museum in 2008.[4]
The museum announced plans for a 8,600 sq ft (800 m2) exhibition hall on the north side of the hangar to improve artifact storage and increase display area in October 2014.[3] The design eventually changed so that by the time it was dedicated in April 2017, the expansion had become an entirely separate building with an external appearance similar to the historic Hangar No. 1.[5][a] Along with the completion of phase one of its development program, the museum hired a new executive director.[6] Then, in December, a BT-13 was donated to the museum by the American Aviation Heritage Foundation.[7]
The museum closed for its phase two expansion – the addition of a welcome center, office space and the Catherine Vail Bridge Education Center – in November 2020.[8]