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Listings
All links in this category.
Showing 2,051–2,100 of 3,692 editor-approved links.
Provides history, photos, hours of operation, admission, and contact details. Located in Barrington.
Features memories of Lucy Maud Montgomery, famous for writing Anne of Green Gables. Bala, Ontario. Includes hours, rates, photos and details of exhibits, directions and a map to the location in Muskoka.
Farmhouse with a Georgian exterior was built by the David Gibson family in 1851, and includes a schedule and directions located at Toronto.
Lebanon home of the son of Connecticut's Revolutionary War Governor who served as General George Washington's secretary during the American Revolution and was later governor of Connecticut from 1797-1809.
General information, history, floor plans, calendar of events and directions. Located in Norwalk.
c.1824 home that houses the Windham Historical Society. News, upcoming events, galleries and resources.
Built in the 1730s by the town’s wealthiest landowner, Doctor John Finney, including historical information located at New Castle.
Photo, historical overview and information on programs and events. Located on Jones Neck.
A brick Italian Villa style structure featuring a three-story center entry built in 1859, and contains general information and images located at Seaford.
History of the houses and family with a gallery. Located in Titusville.
Visitor information, news, events, and galleries. Located in Fayetteville.
Located in Chicago, Glessner House was finished in 1887, one year after the architect, Henry Hobson Richardson's death.
Provides information and pictures about President Grant's home, Market House and Washburne House.
A restored Victorian style mansion built in 1876 with many original furnishings and features. Features photos. Located in Richmond.
An example of Gothic Revival architecture in Kentucky, reflecting the Romantic Movement of the 1850s, a reflection of the social lifestyles and opulence of the day. Located in Lexington.
A 14-room Federal-style home that was the center of the 19th-century hemp plantation of John and Lucy Speed. Includes schedule and calendar of events. Located in Louisville.
A 19th century sugar manor house and home to the Terrebonne Museum of history and culture was built in 1859 as a one-story Greek Revival house by William J. Minor, and comprises of images, information, exhibits, and events calendar located at Houma.
Features three hundred acre estate of the Col. John Black, built in 1824. Includes image library, events, and membership. Located in Ellsworth.
A 1760 colonial Georgian home built by one of Maryland’s leading patriots and one of the first state senators, Charles Carroll, Barrister. History, virtual tour, visitor information, events, and museum store. Located in Baltimore.
The home of Elizabeth Ann Seton, the first American-born woman beatified and canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. Includes visitor information. Located in Baltimore.
Consists of two historic houses in the center of Amherst, Massachusetts, closely associated with the poet Emily Dickinson and members of her family. Offers information on tours, hours, and admissions.
Features an article of the home and directions.
Construction of the 56 room Fair Lane began in February 1914 and was completed by January 1916, and includes information on the home, the family, programs, events and educational resources with a gift shop located at Dearborn.
Charles Henry Manship, Civil War mayor of Jackson, built his Gothic Revival cottage villa in 1857, a home in striking contrast to the Greek Revival mansions for which the South was famed, includes images and general information.
Built as a school in 1820, later became a residence in 1825 when local businessman Maxwell Chambers and his half-sister Rebecca Troy purchased the house and made it their home located at Salisbury.
Guide provided by The Victorian Preservation Association. Includes descriptions of recommended sites, approximate costs, hours and locations.
Built in the early eighteenth century, the home is an example of Palladian architecture, and includes historical and tour information located at Philadelphia.
History museum that explores the civilian experiences at Gettysburg during and after this Civil War battle. Includes rates, hours, and events.
Built in 1765 by merchant and businessman Charles Stedman, this elegant Georgian brick mansion was purchased by Samuel Powel in 1769 at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth Willing, and gives history, fun facts, and photo tour located at Philadelphia.
33-acre historic property situated on Bristol Harbor overlooking Narragansett Bay in Bristol.
An example of late 18th century Rhode Island architecture, furnished throughout with notable pieces from the Revolutionary period. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and located in East Greenwich.
Built as a summer home for a local plantation owner, was constructed c. 1840 and is one of only eight antebellum homes remaining in Bluffton, and contains information on tours, history, store, news, images, and general information.
The c. 1816 home built by Polk’s father Samuel with images and general information located at Columbia.
1799 Federal style house on the Chesapeake Bay's lower Eastern Shore. Exhibits include period furnishings and decorative arts. Includes hours, admissions, events and photos. Located in Onancock.
Her last official Washington, DC residence and the first headquarters of the National Council of Negro Women.
Features an underground tour of the Ocean Deeps Colliery, the village, theatre, tour information, exhibits, and gift shop located at Glace Bay.
Remnants of a World War II military installation that includes images, and general and visitor information located at Kodiak.
Tourist attractions and events, including general information on Boot Hill Graveyard and the gift shop, City Park, and Schieffelin Monument.
Dedicated to the preservation of America's Old West frontier heritage. Located approximately 30 miles north of downtown Phoenix and encompasses 28 historic buildings spread out over 90 acres.
Location of the Yuma Quartermaster Depot used by the U.S. Army to store and distribute supplies for all the military posts in Arizona, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico and Texas, including a map, FAQs, and calendar of events.
Visitor information on the Hinderliter Grog Shop (c. 1826), the Brownlee House (c. 1848), the Woodruff Print Shop (c. 1824), the McVicar House (c. 1848), and the Plum Bayou Log House (c. 1830's) located at Little Rock.
Historically and architecturally significant buildings which cannot be preserved at their original location are relocated to a village-like setting, restored, displayed, and interpreted to the public with visitor information located at Los Angeles.
The infamous federal prison, the Rock, from 1934 to 1963 with information on exhibits and the American Indian Occupation (1969 to 1971) located at San Francisco.
A historical cell house that was the original Women's Correctional Facility constructed in 1935, and includes visitor and tour information, events, and inside tales located at Cañon City.
Permanent exhibit information on the Coach House, log cabin (an 1830s replica), the Müller House (1890s) and the Banta House (1908) with history, classes and programs, and calendar of events.
Depicts the lives and lifestyles of free African Americans in the year 1870. Includes history, upcoming events, programs, virtual field trip, membership and volunteer opportunities, and links. Located in Indianapolis.
Features five historic areas, a modern Museum Center and over 1,400 acres. Includes details of exhibits, hours, admission rates, membership and directions. Located in Fishers.
Features 1875 frontier town with 18 buildings and other farm sites. Includes details, memberships, volunteer opportunities, hours and admissions, special events, educational programs. Located in Urbandale.
The first permanent settlement west of the Alleghenies in what would become Central Kentucky established in 1774 by James Harrod with details, programs, events and directions located at Harrodsburg.
Spotlights the lighthouse historic complex, which includes a maritime museum, shipwreck artifacts, Michigan's first commercial copper mine site, and easy historic walking paths located at Mohawk.