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Historic House Museums in America

Free Database of Historic Houses open to the public

Tudor Revival

17 Museums Found
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Ashcroft

Agecroft Hall & Gardens

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  • 804-353-4241

For hundreds of years, Agecroft Hall was the distinguished home of England's Langley and Dauntesey families. At the end of the 19th century, however, Agecroft fell into disrepair, and in 1925 it was sold at auction. Hearing of this tremendous opportunity, Richmonder Thomas C. Williams, Jr. purchased the structure, and had it dismantled, crated, and shipped across the Atlantic,… Read More

Ainsley House

Ainsley House

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$$$$
  • 408-866-2119
  • 300 Grant St, Campbell, CA 95008, USA

The Ainsley House - Beautifully restored in an enchanting park-like setting, the English Tudor style architecture of the Ainsley House transports the visitor to the bygone era of the 1920s. Built in 1925 as the home for Campbell canning pioneer J.C. Ainsley and his wife Alcinda, the home was moved to its present location in 1990. The exquisitely restored… Read More

Campbell House

Campbell House

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  • 509-456-3931
  • 2316 West First Avenue, Spokane, WA 99201

The Campbell House was designed by Kirtland Cutter and Karl Malmgren and was built in 1898 for Amasa B. Campbell, his wife Grace, and their daughter Helen. Campbell made a fortune in mining exploration and operations in the Coeur d’Alene mining region northeast of Spokane. He partnered with John Finch, his neighbor living two houses to the west. Helen… Read More

Charles Allis Art Museum

Charles Allis Art Museum

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  • 414-278-8295
  • 1801 N Prospect Ave, Milwaukee, WI, USA

When Charles and Sarah Allis decided to build a home that would eventually become a public museum, they turned to Alexander Eschweiler, a prominent local architect, to design it. The resulting mansion is strongly influenced by the English Tudor style. Construction began in 1909 and was completed in 1911. Read More

Curtis Mansion

Curtis Mansion

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  • 563-242-8556

This restored Victorian home of Lumber Baron George M. Curtis is a fine example of period architecture with its original Tiffany glass windows, delicately carved banisters, ornate wood trim and massive fireplaces. Read More

Highfield Hall

Highfield Hall

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  • 508-495-1878
  • 56 Highfield Drive, Falmouth, MA, USA

Highfield Hall is an 1878 Cape Cod summer mansion that has undergone a multi-million restoration and is now being used as a community cultural center. Read More

MacNider Museum

MacNider Art Museum

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  • 641-422-9612
  • 303 2nd Street Southeast, Mason City, IA, USA

The English tudor style mansion houses a permanent collection of 19th and 20th century American art. Read More

Meadow Brook Hall

Meadow Brook

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  • 248-364-6200
  • 350 Estate Drive, Rochester, MI, USA

Built in 1926, this 100 room Tudor mansion was the former home of Alfred and Matilda (Dodge) Wilson. Of special interest are the ballroom, antique needlepoint draperies, 24 fireplaces, hand carved paneling in the library and great hall, sculptured ceiling in the dining room, pipe organ and stone entranceway. Read More

Sawyer Mansion

Oshkosh Public Museum

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  • 920-236-5799
  • 1331 Algoma Boulevard, Oshkosh, WI, USA

Several galleries of the Oshkosh Public Museum are located in an English Tudor Revival residence built in 1908 for Edgar P. Sawyer, a lumber baron, banker, and businessman. William Waters, a prominent local architect, designed the home. With its gabled roof, fluted chimneys, Bedford stone carriage port, and elevator, the home was considered to be the finest in Oshkosh. Read More

Paine

Paine Art Center & Gardens

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  • 920-235-6903
  • 1410 Algoma Blvd, Oshkosh, WI, USA

The museum preserves the property's historic architecture, with the mansion as the centerpiece, and many of the house's interiors as they were created by founders Nathan and Jessie Kimberly Paine. Selections from the museum's art collection, much of which was acquired by Nathan and Jessie, are featured in the many rooms and settings of the estate. Read More

Norris House

Senator George Norris State Historic Site

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$$$$
  • 308-345-8484
  • 706 Norris Avenue, McCook, NE, USA

At the Norris House you'll discover the fascinating story of the father of the Rural Electrification Act, the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, and Nebraska's one-house legislature. The house and all its furnishings were donated to the Historical Society by Norris's wife, Ellie in 1968. Exhibits located in the basement of the house trace the senator's life and career. Read More

Sonnenberg

Sonnenberg Gardens and Mansion

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  • 585-394-4922
  • 151 Charlotte Street, Canandaigua, NY, USA

A beautiful Victorian mansion and gardens, located at the north end of Canandaigua Lake was ormerly the summer home of Canandaigua benefactors Frederick Ferris and Mary Clark Thompson. Read More

Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens

Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens

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$$$$
  • 330-836-5533
  • 714 North Portage Path, Akron, OH, USA

Built between 1912 and 1915, Stan Hywet Hall was one of the finest examples of the American Country Estate movement, which flourished during the Industrial Age. Unlike European country houses that were created by generations of title and wealth, the American Country Estates were built by the wealth of self-made industry giants. Vanderbilt’s Biltmore, Rockefeller’s Kykuit, and Hearst’s San… Read More

The Conrad Mansion Museum

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  • 406-755-2166

The Conrad Mansion was designed by Spokane architect, Kirtland Cutter, and was completed in 1895. The home's exterior is punctuated by arches, long gables, bay windows and massive native stone chimneys. Read More

Topsmead

Topsmead State Forest

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  • 860-567-5694
  • Buell Road, Litchfield, CT, USA

In 1917, Miss Chase received from her father approximately 16 acres on Jefferson Hill in Litchfield. Here she built a rustic cabin, which was replaced with a more substantial summer home in 1923. Read More

Van Orden Mansion

Van Orden Mansion

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  • 608-356-1001
  • 531 4th Ave, Baraboo, WI, USA

The Van Orden Mansion has served as the home of the Sauk County Historical Museum since 1939. Finished in 1904, the mansion contains over one hundred years of artifacts donated to the society. Original features include woodwork, wall coverings, light fixtures, carpets and some of the family's furniture. Read More

Womens National Democratic Club

Woman’s National Democratic Club

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  • 202-232-7363
  • 1526 New Hampshire Avenue Northwest, Washington, DC, USA

Built in 1894, the home of the Woman's National Democratic Club, also known as the Whittemore House, was placed on the DC Register in 1964 and on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 as a landmark of importance that contributes significantly to the cultural heritage and visual beauty of the city Read More

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