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Historic House Museums in America

Free Database of Historic Houses open to the public

Maryland

24 Museums Found
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Beall-Dawson House

Beall-Dawson Historic House Museum

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  • 301-340-2825

The Beall-Dawson House was built circa 1815 for Upton Beall and his wife and daughters. Beall, from a prominent Georgetown family, was Clerk of the Court for the county, and he wanted a home that would reflect his wealth and status. In 1815 Rockville was a small rural community, despite being the county seat and an important cross-roads town.… Read More

Captain Avery Museum

Captain Avery Museum

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  • 410-867-4486
  • 1418 E West Shady Side Rd, Shady Side, MD, USA

The Captain Salem Avery House was built c. 1860 on the Banks of the West River in Shady Side, Maryland. Captain Avery, a Long Island fisherman, came to the area to make his living from the abundant waters of the Chesapeake Bay. He married Lucretia Weedon of Mayo, Maryland, and they lived in the house for thirty years raising… Read More

Clara Barton National Historic Site

Clara Barton National Historic Site

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  • 301-320-1410
  • 5801 Oxford Road, Glen Echo, MD, USA

Clara Barton National Historic Site commemorates the life of Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross. The home served as the headquarters and warehouse for the organization. From this house, Miss Barton organized American Red Cross relief efforts for victims of natural disasters and war. Read More

Evergreen_Museum__Library_Baltimore

Evergreen Museum & Library

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$$$$
  • 410-516-0341
  • 4545 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21210, USA

Evergreen Museum & Library is housed in a Gilded Age mansion surrounded by 26 acres of gardens and woods. The museum is home to a renowned collection of fine and decorative arts, rare books, and manuscripts assembled by two generations of Baltimore’s civic-minded Garrett family (1878-1952). Though originally constructed in 1858, Evergreen was drastically expanded and altered by the… Read More

Gordon Roberts House

Gordon-Roberts House

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$$$$
  • 301-777-8678
  • 218 Washington Street, Cumberland, MD, USA

The Gordon-Roberts House was built on lot #60 of the Town of Cumberland as laid out by Thomas Beall of Samuel, who was offered at public sale, February 1812. The highest bidder was Beal Howard who paid $16.62 for the lot, plus $1.00 per year for ground rent. Beal Howard sold this land to Daniel Carroll Brent of Stafford… Read More

Hammon-Harwood House

Hammond-Harwood House

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  • 410-263-4683
  • 19 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, MD, USA

Hammond-Harwood House is the Jewel of Annapolis, the grandest Colonial house in Annapolis, preserved intact since 1774. It was the last project of the renowned Colonial architect William Buckland. In addition to its magnificent, perfectly preserved architecture inside and out, this National Historic Landmark contains an outstanding collection of John Shaw furniture and Charles Willson Peale paintings. Read More

Hamptons

Hampton National Historic Site

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  • 410-823-1309
  • 535 Hampton Lane, Towson, MD, USA

Hampton National Historic Site offers an exceptional, perhaps unmatched, look at a nineteenth century slave estate. Still visible today is the careful design intended to impress visitors. The mansion looks down on the overseer's house, and the overseer's house looks down on the slave quarters, reminding visitors and workers of their place in life. The mansion survives almost unchanged… Read More

Homewood Museum

Homewood House Museum

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$$$$
  • 410-516-5589
  • 3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD, USA

A National Historic Landmark, Homewood is one of the best-surviving examples of Federal-period Palladian architecture in the nation. Built circa 1801 for members of Maryland’s prominent Carroll family, the house also was home to at least 25 enslaved individuals, including William and Rebecca Ross and their two children and Izadod and Cis Conner and six of their 13 children.… Read More

Irish Railroad Workers Museum

Irish Railroad Workers Museum

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$$$$
  • 410-347-4747
  • 918 Lemmon Street, Baltimore, MD, USA

The Irish Railroad Workers Museum consists of two renovated alley houses in 900 block of Lemmon Street. The houses on Lemmon Street were built in 1848 to provide homes for the growing number of workers needed by America's first railroad. One of the houses is furnished as a period-house museum, reflecting the lives of the Irish-immigrant family who lived… Read More

James E Kirwan House

James E. Kirwan House

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  • 410-829-7760
  • 641 Dominion Road, Chester, MD, USA

The James E. Kirwan House and Store is a living museum located south of the village of Chester on Kent Island, Queen Anne's County, Maryland. It served as a general store, lumber mill, cooper's mill, and blacksmith shop between 1889 and 1955 and facilitated local trade as a port on Kirwan Creek. Read More

Miller House Museum

Miller House Museum

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  • 301-797-8782
  • 135 W Washington St, Hagerstown, MD, USA

Founded in 1911, the Washington County Historical Society has played a significant role in preserving historic sites, artifacts and archival records for Washington County, Maryland. Located in downtown Hagerstown, the Miller House serves as the home of the historical society, the Jamieson Genealogical Research Library, and the Miller House Museum. The museum gives visitors a taste of life in… Read More

Montpelier

Montpelier Mansion

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  • 301-377-7817
  • 9650 Muirkirk Road, Laurel, MD, USA

A fine example of Georgian architecture, popular in Maryland in the late 1700s, Montpelier Mansion sits on approximately 70 acres of beautiful parkland. Architectural and building construction details, as well as historical research, suggest that the house was constructed between 1781 and 1785. Major Thomas Snowden and his wife Anne, original owners of Montpelier Mansion, welcomed many distinguished guests… Read More

Mount Clare

Mount Clare Museum House

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$$$$
  • 410-837-3262
  • 1500 Washington Blvd, Baltimore, MD, USA

Mount Clare is a 1760 colonial Georgian home built by one of Maryland’s leading patriots and one of our first state senators, Charles Carroll, Barrister. Mount Clare was the center of Georgia Plantation, a self-sufficient plantation with a diverse community. Because of its exceptional value in interpreting our rich national heritage, Mount Clare was designated a National Historic Landmark… Read More

Mount Harmon

Mount Harmon Plantation

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  • 410-275-8819
  • 600 Mount Harmon Road, Earleville, MD, USA

Plantation House is a three-story, five bay, brick double pile structure dated to 1730. The interior is furnished with American, English, Irish and Scottish antiques of the period. The 200 acre property includes an out plantation kitchen and tobacco prize house. Read More

Riversdale House Museum

Riversdale House Museum

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  • 301-864-420
  • 4811 Riverdale Road, Riverdale, MD, USA

Riversdale, a National Historic Landmark, was constructed between 1801 and 1807 for Henri Stier, a Flemish aristocrat, and completed by his daughter, Rosalie, and her husband, George Calvert, grandson of the fifth Lord Baltimore. Today, this elegant architectural gem has been restored to reflect the lifestyle of the Calverts in Federal America. Rosalie Calvert’s letters, supplemented by other archival… Read More

Rose Hill Manor

Rose Hill Manor

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  • 301-600-1650
  • 1611 North Market Street, Frederick, MD, USA

Rose Hill Manor was built in 1790s by John & Ann Grahame. The home was the last home in which Gov. Thomas Johnson, Maryland's First Governor resided. Today it is preserved as part of one of Rose Hill Manor Park and houses a hands-on history museum. Read More

Salisbury Mansion

Salisbury Mansion

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  • 508-753-8278
  • 40 Highland Street, Worcester, MA, USA

Salisbury Mansion was once home to one of Worcester County's wealthiest families. It was built in 1772 as a combination store and dwelling for a bachelor merchant from Boston, Stephen Salisbury (1746-1829). He brought his bride, Elizabeth Tuckerman (1768-1851) of Boston, to live there in 1798. Read More

Sotterley

Sotterley Plantation

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$$$$
  • 301-373-2280
  • 44300 Sotterley Lane, Hollywood, MD, USA

Older than Mount Vernon, older than Monticello, older than the nation itself, Sotterley Plantation stands majestically on the banks of the Patuxent River. It is the only remaining Tidewater Plantation in Maryland that is open to the public with a full range of visitor activities and educational programs. Sotterley's significant architecture features the early 18th-century Manor House, a rare… Read More

Surratt House Museum

Surratt House Museum

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  • 301-868-1121
  • 9118 Brandywine Road, Clinton, MD, USA

Built in 1852 as a middle-class plantation home, historic Surratt House also served as a tavern and hostelry, a post office, and polling place during the crucial decade before the Civil War. During the war, it was a safehouse for the Confederate underground which flourished in Southern Maryland. It was the country home of Mary Surratt, first woman to… Read More

Teakle

Teackle Mansion

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  • 410-651-2238
  • 11736 Mansion St, Princess Anne, MD, USA

The 10,000 square foot American villa style house exhibits a grandiose plan that included decorative plaster finishes, an indoor bath, steam operated kitchen equipment and a wide range of furnishings. Read More

Poe House

The Baltimore Poe House and Museum

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  • 410-396-7932
  • 203 North Amity Street, Baltimore, MD, USA

The house was built around 1830 in what was then considered the country. The new Baltimore and Ohio train station had opened a few short blocks south of the Poe House in 1830. Read More

Star Spangled Flag House

The Star Spangled Banner Flag House

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  • 410-837-1793
  • 844 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD, USA

Built in 1793, the Star-Spangled Banner Flag House was the home and place of business of Mary Pickersgill, maker of the flag that inspired Francis Scott Key’s famous poem that later became our national anthem. Mary and her daughter Caroline moved into the house in 1806, along with Mary’s mother, Rebecca Young, who began the flag-making business in Philadelphia… Read More

William Paca House & Garden

William Paca House and Garden

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  • 410-990-4538
  • 186 Prince George Street, Annapolis, MD, USA

The William Paca House & Garden is a National Historic Landmark, restored by Historic Annapolis to its colonial-era splendor. The House is open for docent-led tours for individuals and groups. Tours take place hourly on the half-hour, last approximately 40 minutes, and encompass two floors of 18th-century history. You can take a self-paced tour of the garden at any… Read More

Winslow Crocker House

Winslow Crocker House

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  • 617-994-6661
  • 250 Main Street, Yarmouth Port, MA, USA

In 1936, Mary Thacher had Winslow Crocker House moved six miles down the Old King's Highway to its present location. Over a ten-month period, the house was taken apart, beam by beam, and reassembled next door to her ancestral home in Yarmouth Port. Miss Thacher remodeled the interior of the house to provide an attractive backdrop the significant collection… Read More

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