The Willamette Valley and Wine Country

We’ve compiled the best of the best in The Willamette Valley and Wine Country - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

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  • 1. Mount Angel Abbey

    This Benedictine monastery on a 300-foot-high butte was founded in 1882 and is the site of one of two modernist buildings in the United States designed by Finnish architect Alvar Aalto. A masterpiece of serene and thoughtful design, Aalto's library opened its doors in 1970, and has become a place of pilgrimage for students and aficionados of modern architecture. You also can sample beers produced by the abbey's in-house brewery (the aptly named Benedictine Brewery) at its taproom just up the road.

    1 Abbey Dr., Salem, Oregon, 97373, USA
    503-845–3030

    Sight Details

    Taproom closed Mon. and Tues. Rate Includes: Free
  • 2. Bethel Heights Vineyard

    Founded in 1977, Bethel Heights was one of the first vineyards planted in the Eola Hills region of the Willamette Valley. It produces Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc, and Pinot Gris. The tasting room has one of the most glorious panoramic views of any winery in the state; its terrace and picnic area overlook the surrounding vineyards, the valley below, and Mt. Jefferson in the distance.

    6060 Bethel Heights Rd. NW, Salem, Oregon, 97304, USA
    503-581–2262

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Tastings $20, By appointment only
  • 3. Elsinore Theatre

    This flamboyant Tudor Gothic vaudeville house opened on May 28, 1926, with Edgar Bergen in attendance. Clark Gable (who lived in nearby Silverton) and Gregory Peck performed on stage. The theater was designed to look like a castle, with a false-stone front, chandeliers, ironwork, and stained-glass windows. It's now a lively performing arts center with a busy schedule of comedy and music bookings, and there are concerts on its Wurlitzer pipe organ.

    170 High St. SE, Salem, Oregon, 97301, USA
    503-375–3574
  • 4. Gilbert House Children's Museum

    Celebrating the life and the inventions of A.C. Gilbert, a Salem native who became a toy manufacturer and inventor, this museum is an amazing place to let the imagination run wild. There are themed interactive rooms along with a huge outdoor play structure. In addition to the children's activities, many beloved toys created by A.C. Gilbert are on display, including Erector sets and American Flyer trains. The wide range of indoor and outdoor interactive exhibits will appeal to children (and adults) of all ages.

    116 Marion St. NE, Salem, Oregon, 97301, USA
    503-371–3631

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $10, Closed Mon. except during school holidays
  • 5. Oregon Garden

    Just outside the town of Silverton, a 25-minute drive from Salem, the Oregon Garden showcases the botanical diversity of the Willamette Valley and Pacific Northwest. The 80-acre garden features themed plots ranging from a conifer forest to medicinal plants. There's also a whimsical children's garden complete with a make-believe fossil dig, and another garden featuring the agricultural bounty of the area. From April to September, visitors can take a narrated tram tour through the garden.

    879 W. Main St., Salem, Oregon, 97381, USA
    503-874–8100

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $8–$12 depending on season; $3 tram tours
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  • 6. Silver Falls State Park

    Hidden amid old-growth Douglas firs in the foothills of the Cascades, this is the largest state park in Oregon (8,700 acres). South Falls, roaring over the lip of a mossy basalt bowl into a deep pool 177 feet below, is the main attraction here, but 13 other waterfalls—half of them more than 100 feet high—are accessible to hikers. The best time to visit is in the fall, when vine maples blaze with brilliant color, or early spring, when the forest floor is carpeted with trilliums and yellow violets; in winter you can cross-country ski. Cabin and lodge accommodations are also available.

    20024 Silver Falls Hwy. SE, Salem, Oregon, 97381, USA
    503-873–8681

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
    View Tours and Activities
  • 7. Willamette Heritage Center

    Take a trip back in time to experience the story of Oregon's early pioneers and the industrial revolution. The Thomas Kay Woolen Mill Museum complex (circa 1889), complete with working waterwheels and millstream, looks as if the workers have just stepped away for a lunch break. Teasel gigging, napper flock bins, and the patented Furber double-acting napper are but a few of the machines and processes on display. The Jason Lee House, the John D. Boon Home, and the Methodist Parsonage are also part of the village. There is nothing grandiose about these early pioneer homes, the oldest frame structures in the Northwest, but they reveal a great deal about domestic life in the wilds of Oregon in the 1840s.

    1313 Mill St. SE, Salem, Oregon, 97301, USA
    503-585–7012

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $8, Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 8. Willamette Mission State Park

    Along pastoral lowlands by the Willamette River, this serene park holds the largest black cottonwood tree in the United States. A thick-barked behemoth by a small pond, the 275-year-old tree has upraised arms that bring to mind J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional Ents. Site of Reverend Jason Lee's 1834 pioneer mission, the park also offers quiet strolling and picnicking in an old orchard and along the river. The Wheatland Ferry, at the north end of the park, began carrying covered wagons across the Willamette in 1844 and is still in operation today.

    Wheatland Rd., Salem, Oregon, 97026, USA
    503-393–1172

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
  • 9. Willamette University

    Behind the Capitol, across State Street but half a world away, are the brick buildings and grounds of Willamette University, the oldest college in the West. Founded in 1842, Willamette has long been a breeding ground for aspiring politicians. Hatfield Library, built in 1986 on the banks of Mill Stream, is a handsome brick-and-glass building with a striking campanile; tall, prim Waller Hall, built in 1867, is one of the oldest buildings in the Pacific Northwest. It's also home to the Hallie Ford Museum of Art, the third-largest art museum in the state.

    900 State St., Salem, Oregon, 97301, USA
    503-370–6300

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends

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