Herkimer Home State Historic Site [NY]

Description

The Herkimer Home is the old home of Revolutionary War hero General Nicholas Herkimer. The Georgian-style mansion and surrounding grounds look much the same as they did during the 18th century.

The home offers guided tours, re-enactments, field trip programs, hiking trails, demonstrations, and special events including summer camps and special presentations. The website offers visitor information and a brief history of the site.

Monteith House Museum [OR]

Description

The Monteith House Museum stands as a monument to the early Oregon settlers. The Monteith brothers traveled to Oregon in 1847, and started the town of Albany, which is located in the heart of the Williamette valley in Oregon. The home served as much more than a simple home. The Monteith family allowed the home to be used for community meetings of all kinds during the early days of Albany. Today, the home is listed on the national register of historic places.

The house offers guided tours and exhibits that showcase Oregon's early history. The website offers a brief history of the home along with visitor information.

Lambertville Historical Society [NJ]

Description

The Lambertville Historical Society is dedicated to preserving the history of Lambertville, New Jersey and the surrounding area. The society is headquartered in the James Wilson Marshall House. Today, the Marshall House serves as both a historic house museum, a local history museum, and a society archives.

The house offers guided tours by appointment, exhibits, and an archives. The society further offers walking tours of the town monthly during the summer months or by appointment. The website offers visitor information, an events calendar, an online exhibit, archival access, and a brief history of the town.

Hanover Area Historical Society [PA]

Description

The Hanover Area Historical Society was founded in 1965 by local citizens in order to preserve the historical heritage of Hanover and the surrounding area. The society maintains two historic house museums, the Warehime-Myers Mansion and the Neahs House. The Neahs House is currently being converted into a local history museum.

Both houses offer guided tours on Saturdays or by appointment. The society also offers special events including concerts and walking tours, and local history exhibits are offered in the Neahs House. The website offers visitor information, brief histories of the two historic house museums, an events calendar, and an online version of the society newsletter.

Johnson County Historical Society Museum [IA]

Description

The Johnson County Historical Society opened the Heritage Museum in 1983 in order to help chronicle the history of the area. The museum has an impressive collection of artifacts, paintings, photographs, and documents that take the visitor through the history of Johnson County. In addition to the museum, Johnson County Historical Society owns three other historic house properties in the area, which are open to visitors during the summer months.

The museum offers exhibits regarding the history of Johnson County and individual and group tours of the museum and other local properties. The website offers visitor information and historical information regarding specific Johnson County historical events.

Eisenhower Birthplace State Historic Site [TX]

Description

Eisenhower Birthplace State Historic Site features the modest two-story frame house in the railroad town of Denison where Dwight D. Eisenhower was born in 1890. Eisenhower's father worked for the railroad and the birthplace contains family possessions and period antiques demonstrating the lifestyle of a late 19th-century working family. The site includes six acres of scenic woods and creek bottomland intersected by an abandoned rail track turned into a hiking path. The visitor center is a historic structure filled with hundreds of items relating to Eisenhower and his role in U.S. and world history.

The site offers exhibits and tours.

Historic Rosedale Plantation [NC]

Description

Rosedale, originally part of a 911 acre plantation, was built in 1815 by Archibald Frew, merchant, postmaster and tax collector. In the 1830s, a doctor occupied the residence. He oversaw both his practice and the plantation work, carried out by two slave families. Rosedale exemplifies Federal period architecture (1780–1830) and is noted for its faux grain woodwork and the original French wallpaper that survives in three rooms. On a broader scope, the plantation is motivated by the preservation, exhibition, interpretation, and preservation of the architecture, decorative arts, and lifestyle of the 19th–century Catawba River Valley region.

The plantation offers guided tours (both in modern and period dress), hands-on activities, role playing, and educational activities (with listed corresponding state
standards) specifically for field trips.

James Madison's Montpelier [VA]

Description

The Montpelier Foundation's primary mission is to present the lasting legacy of James Madison (1751–1836) as Father of the U.S. Constitution, architect of the Bill of Rights, and fourth president of the United States. The Montpelier estate, home of Madison for the majority of his life, features the Madison mansion, historic buildings, gardens, forests, a freedman's cabin and farm, and the site of a Civil War encampment.

The Montpelier Foundation offers exhibits, an archaeological lab and sites, hands-on activities, an introductory film, guided tours of the Madison mansion, self-guided landscape tours, a variety of other thematic guided tours, limited transportation grants, and educational programming with suggested grade levels (including in-class outreach presentations).

Alexander Ramsey House [MN]

Description

One of the nation's best preserved Victorian-era homes, St. Paul's Ramsey House offers a glimpse into family and servant life in the 1870s, with the house decoration reflecting 1872–1900. Ramsey himself served as Minnesota Territorial Governor, mayor of St. Paul, second state governor, U.S. Senator, and Secretary of War under President Hayes.

The site offers tours by guides in period dress, lectures, and digitized pre-visit curricula.

Schriver House Museum [PA]

Description

The Schriver House Museum aims to provide a unique perspective often overlooked by interpreters of the Battle of Gettysburg—namely the civilian experience, offering an authentic glimpse of what life was like during the war years. Guides in period attire tell the Shriver family's story within their restored home, originally built in 1860. The property temporarily housed Union soldiers and includes a garret used by Confederate sharpshooters during the Battle of Gettysburg and a cellar where locals gathered to escape the fighting. Collections include photographs and documents concerning the Shriver family and artifacts discovered during the architectural restoration. A mid-19th century "in town" garden is situated directly behind the Shriver's home.

The museum offers exhibits and tours guided by docents in period attire.