5 Best Sights in San Diego, California

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We've compiled the best of the best in San Diego - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

The Whaley House Museum

Old Town Fodor's Choice

A New York entrepreneur, Thomas Whaley came to California during the gold rush. He wanted to provide his East Coast wife with all the comforts of home, so in 1857 he had Southern California's first two-story brick structure built, making it the oldest double-story brick building on the West Coast. The house, which served as the county courthouse and government seat during the 1870s, stands in strong contrast to the Spanish-style adobe residences that surround the nearby historic plaza and marks an early stage of San Diego's "Americanization." A garden out back includes many varieties of prehybrid roses from before 1867. The place is perhaps most famed, however, for the ghosts that are said to inhabit it. You can tour on your own during the day, but must visit by guided tour after 4:30 pm. The evening tours are geared toward the supernatural aspects of the house. Tours start at 5 pm and are offered every half hour, with the last tour departing at 9:30 pm.

Casa de Estudillo

Old Town

La Casa de Estudillo was built on Mason Street between 1827 and 1829 by San Diego's first County Assessor, Jose Antonio Estudillo, in collaboration with his father, the commander of the San Diego Presidio, José María Estudillo. The largest and most elaborate of the original adobe homes, it was occupied by members of the Estudillo family until 1887. It was purchased and restored in 1910 by sugar magnate and developer John D. Spreckels, who advertised it in bold lettering on the side as "Ramona's Marriage Place." Spreckels's claim that the small chapel in the house was the site of the wedding in Helen Hunt Jackson's popular novel Ramona had no basis; that didn't stop people from coming to see it, however. Today, the historic structure is open daily for the public to explore.

4000 Mason St., San Diego, CA, 92110, USA
Sight Details
Free

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Gaslamp Museum at the Davis-Horton House

Gaslamp Quarter

The oldest wooden house in San Diego houses the Gaslamp Quarter Historical Foundation, the district's curator. Before developer Alonzo Horton came to town, Davis, a prominent San Franciscan, had made an unsuccessful attempt to develop the waterfront area. In 1850 he had this prefab saltbox-style house, built in Maine, shipped around Cape Horn and assembled in San Diego (it originally stood at State and Market streets). Pre-booked private tours of the home are available on Tuesdays (starting at $20) and general admission runs Wednesday through Sunday (starting at $8). Walking tours ($25) of the historic district leave from the house on Thursday at 3 pm and Saturday at 11 am, and themed tours are also available depending on the season, such as a 30-minute "Strange & Spooky" tour in fall.

410 Island Ave., San Diego, CA, 92101, USA
619-233–4692
Sight Details
$8 self-guided, $12 with audio tour
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations strongly encouraged

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Marston House Museum & Gardens

Balboa Park

San Diego pioneer and philanthropist George W. Marston (1850–1946) who financed the architectural landscaping of Balboa Park—among his myriad other San Diego civic projects—lived in this 16-room home at the northwest edge of the park. Designed in 1905 by San Diego architects Irving Gill and William Hebbard, it's a classic example of the American Arts and Crafts style, which emphasizes simplicity and functionality of form. On the 5-acre grounds is a lovely, romantic English garden, as interpreted in California. The house may only be visited by guided tour Friday through Sunday; tours are offered every hour and last 40–45 minutes and the last tour is 4 pm. Call for information about specialty tours of the gardens, historic 7th Avenue, and the Bankers Hill neighborhood.

Robinson-Rose House

Old Town

The Robinson-Rose House, on Wallace Street facing Old Town Plaza, was the original commercial center of Old San Diego, housing railroad offices, law offices, and the first newspaper press. Built in 1853 but in ruins at the end of the 19th century, it has been reconstructed and now serves as the park's visitor center and administrative headquarters. It contains a model of Old Town as it looked in 1872, as well as various historic exhibits. Ghosts came with the rebuild, as the house is now considered haunted. Just behind the Robinson-Rose House is a replica of the Victorian-era Silvas-McCoy house, originally built in 1869.