490 Best Sights in USA

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

Cooper-Molera Adobe

The restored 2-acre complex includes a house dating from the 1820s, a gift shop, bakery, and a large garden enclosed by a high adobe wall. The mostly Victorian-era antiques and memorabilia that fill the house provide a glimpse into the life of a prosperous sea merchant's family. The museum is open weekends for self-guided tours; docents are available to answer questions. If the house is closed, you can still pick up walking-tour maps and stroll the grounds.

506 Munras Ave., Monterey, CA, 93940, USA
800-944–6847
Sight Details
$5 tour
Museum closed weekdays

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Copper King Mansion

William Clark, one of Butte's richest copper barons, built the Copper King Mansion between 1884 and 1888. Tours of the house take in the hand-carved oak paneling, nine original fireplaces, antiques, a lavish ballroom, and frescoes. The house doubles as a B&B.

219 W. Granite St., Butte, MT, 59701, USA
406-782–7580
Sight Details
$20
By reservation only (no tours Oct.--Apr.)

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The Cray House

Completed in 1809 this is a glimpse into middle-class life of the early 19th century. The two-story cottage, furnished with period pieces, sits in a little yard surrounded by a picket fence.

Stevensville, MD, 21666-0321, USA
410-643–5969
Sight Details
Donations accepted
May–Oct., 1st Sat. of month noon to 4 pm and by appointment.

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Daly Mansion

Since 2005, copper king Marcus Daly's 24,000-square-foot, 56-room Daly Mansion, with 25 bedrooms, 15 baths, and five Italian marble fireplaces, has been meticulously restored to preserve its history and elegance. The showplace of Hamilton, this Georgian Revival–style house is open to the public, and tours are available by reservation. There's also a printed walking guide available to the extensive grounds, as well as an audio tour. A number of events and festivities are held at the mansion during the summer.

251 Eastside Hwy., Hamilton, MT, 59840, USA
406-363–6004
Sight Details
$15

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The Daniel Harrison House

Listed on the National Register of Historic Landmarks and operated by the historical society, the Daniel Harrison House is named for Dayton's first settler and is the oldest house in the town. It's also called Fort Harrison, a nod to its fortified stone and frontier style. Costumed interpreters discuss how the furnishings—beds with ropes as slats and hand-quilted comforters—were made. Artifacts on display come from recent excavations undertaken adjacent to the house.

335 Main St., Dayton, VA, 22812, USA
540-879–2280
Sight Details
Donations welcome
Mid-May–Oct. Fri. and Sat. 1–5
Closed Nov.–Apr. except by appointment and Sun.–Thurs. May–Oct.

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David Wills House

The David Wills House is where Abraham Lincoln stayed and completed his Gettysburg Address on November 18, 1863. The restored building features seven galleries, including the bedroom where Lincoln slept and worked on the final versions of his speech, as well as the office of Wills, a prominent lawyer who was a leading force behind the creation of the national cemetery.

Dean Street

Crown Heights
Few residential streets in Crown Heights are as beautiful as Dean Street (especially between Bedford and New York avenues). Unique brownstones reflect Italianate, Edwardian, Victorian, and Renaissance Revival styles. Walking east from Bedford, take note of several wood-frame houses starting at No. 1208, which date back to the 1860s. At the corner of Dean and New York Avenue, compare the two churches across the street from one another: the neo-Byzantine Hebron French-speaking Seventh-day Adventist Church and the redbrick Union United Methodist Church.
Brooklyn, NY, USA

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Decatur House

Foggy Bottom

Decatur House was built in 1818–19 on Lafayette Square, just across from the White House, for naval hero Stephen Decatur and his wife, Susan. Designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, the country's first professional architect, it's one of Washington's oldest surviving homes. But Decatur didn't have long to enjoy it, since he died tragically 14 months later, after a duel with Commodore James Barron. Wealthy hotel and tavern owner John Gadsby purchased the distinguished Federal-style house as a retirement home in 1836. The large two-story dependency was used as quarters for numerous enslaved individuals in his household—Washington's only extant slave quarters. Tours—offered Monday at 10:30 am and 1 pm—feature these historic quarters and the house's first and second floors, much of which represent the taste of a later owner, Marie Beale, beloved for her salons with ambassadors and politicians. The White House Historical Society operates one of its three retail shops here, and you'll find an excellent selection of White House history–themed products, including the annual Christmas ornament.

Destrehan Plantation

The closest intact plantation to New Orleans is also the oldest intact plantation in the entire lower Mississippi Valley. It's a simple West Indies–style house, built in 1787–90 by an enslaved builder of mixed race for the Destrehan family. It's typical of the homes built by the earliest planters in the region. The structure is notable for the hand-hewn cypress timbers used in its construction and for the insulation in its walls, made of bousillage, a mixture of horsehair, Spanish moss, oyster shells, and mud. A costumed guide leads a 30-minute tour through the house furnished with period antiques, starting every half-hour. A special haunted tour, which lasts more than two hours, is offered on Thursday through Sunday evening. The plantation grounds also hold exhibits showcasing documents signed by former Presidents, a history of the extraordinary 1811 Slave Revolt, and original slave cabins from a nearby plantation. Demonstrations of crafts such as weaving, barrel-making, or open-hearth cooking occur regularly, and an annual fall festival with music, crafts, and food is held the second weekend in November.

Dolley Todd House

Historic Area

Built in 1775 by John Dilworth, Todd House has been restored to its 1790s appearance, when its best-known resident, Dolley Payne Todd (1768–1849), lived here. She lost her husband, the Quaker lawyer John Todd, to yellow fever in 1793. The widow later married James Madison, our fourth president. Her time as a hostess in the White House was quite a contrast to her years in this simple home. There's an 18th-century garden next to Todd House.  Open by tour only; free tickets available at the Independence Visitor Center in advance.

Doullut Steamboat Houses

Lower Ninth Ward

In 1905, Paul Doullut was inspired to build a home that resembled the great steamboats of the Mississippi, where he spent his time as a riverboat captain. In 1913, he built a similar home for his son, down the street at 503 Egania. Towering over the Mighty Mississippi and the rest of the neighborhood with wraparound verandas fitted with guardrails and high-perched widow's walks, these houses are architectural oddities specific to their environment. Because the first floors are constructed of ceramic tile, the Doullut houses are uniquely equipped to withstand flooding, and both survived Hurricane Katrina with little damage. Today these are private residences that can only be toured from the outside, but walking along the industrial canal levee from the St. Claude bridge toward Holy Cross is a great way to get a bird's-eye view.

400 Egania St. and 503 Egania St., New Orleans, LA, 70117, USA

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Dr. Hutchings Office and Museum

The contents of his hospital and office are exactly as Dr. Hutchings left them upon his death in 1903. Open since the late 1960s, the museum's Greek Revival building was Dr. Hutchings's residence and practice. His diplomas are hung on the walls and objects typically in a doctor's bag during the late 19th century, or used in exam rooms, are on display.

120 W. 3rd St., Madison, IN, 47250, USA
812-265--2412
Sight Details
$3
Closed Mon.

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Dr. Samuel A. Mudd House

The Dr. Samuel A. Mudd House is where John Wilkes Booth ended up at 4 am on Holy Saturday, 1865, his leg broken after having leaped from the presidential box at Ford's Theater. Most likely, the 32-year-old Dr. Mudd had no idea his patient was wanted for the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Nonetheless, Mudd was convicted of aiding a fugitive and sentenced to life in prison. (His time behind bars was cut short when President Andrew Jackson pardoned him in 1869.) Today the two-story house, set on 197 rolling acres, looks as if the doctor is still in. The dark purple couch where Mudd examined Booth remains in the downstairs parlor, 18th-century family pieces fill the rooms, and the doctor's crude instruments are on display. There's a 30-minute guided tour of the house, an exhibit building, and Mudd's original tombstone. They also have a farm museum and tobacco museum.

3725 Dr. Samuel Mudd Rd., Waldorf, MD, 20601-4359, USA
301-645--6870
Sight Details
$7
Late Mar.–late Nov., Wed. and weekends 11–4
Closed Mon.--Tues.

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Dr. Woods House

Now part of Lincoln Historic Site, Dr. Woods House was once occupied by a country doctor specializing in treatments for chest ailments. The doctor's house is filled with pre-1920s furnishings along with books, instruments, and pharmaceutical supplies from his era.
Main St. (U.S. 380), Lincoln, NM, 88338, USA
Sight Details
$5 to access all of the Lincoln historic sites
Daily 8:30–4:30
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Dubois Home

Take a look at how life once was at this modest pioneer outpost dating from 1898. Renovated to repair hurricane damage to its structure, it's a picture of life before South Florida became a resort area. Sitting atop an ancient Jeaga mound 20 feet high and looking onto the Jupiter Inlet, it has Cape Cod as well as Old Florida design. It's in Dubois Park, worth a visit for its lovely beaches and swimming lagoons. Docents lead tours Tuesday and Thursday, 10–1. The park is open dawn to dusk.

Dumbarton House

Georgetown

Not to be confused with the Dumbarton Oaks museum, a beautiful garden and research center a few blocks away, this circa-1799 brick mansion was once the home of the first U.S. Register of the Treasury, Joseph Nourse. Today it's the headquarters for The Colonial Dames of America. Visitors can tour the antiques-filled Federalist home, which often hosts concerts, theatrical performances, and other community events. Docent-led tours are available on the weekend, and the house is open for self-guided tours from Friday to Sunday. Timed tickets are required.

2715 Q St. NW, Washington, DC, 20007, USA
202-337–2288
Sight Details
$10
Closed Mon.--Thurs.

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E. L. Blumenschein Home and Museum

For an introduction to the history of the Taos Society of Artists, visit the residence of Ernest L. Blumenschein, one of the founding members. One of the rooms in the adobe-style structure dates from 1797. On display are the art, antiques, and other personal possessions of Blumenschein and his wife, Mary Greene Blumenschein, who also painted, as did their daughter Helen. Several of Ernest Blumenschein's vivid oil paintings hang in his former studio, and works by other early Taos artists are also on display.

Ebenezer Maxwell Mansion

Germantown

Philadelphia's only mid-19th-century house-museum is a Victorian Gothic extravaganza of elongated windows and arches that are used to illustrate the way Victorian social mores were reflected through its decoration. The downstairs highlights the Rococo Revival (circa 1860), the upstairs is fashioned after the Renaissance Revival (1880s), and the difference is striking, especially the art deco–like wall details you may not associate with the time. Throughout the year there are a number of special teas and holiday-themed events, and occasionally music and period-appropriate theater productions. Sign up online for tours (noon, 1 pm, and 2 pm) that are available Thursday through Sunday.

200 W. Tulpehocken St., Philadelphia, PA, 19144, USA
215-438–1861
Sight Details
$12
Closed Sun.–Thurs.
Reservations required

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Eden Gardens State Park

If you can tear yourself away from the sand and sea, there's a lovely green alternative just a few miles inland at the restored home of lumber magnate William Henry Wesley. Tours of the mansion are given throughout the day, and furnishings inside the spacious rooms date from as far back as the 17th century. The surrounding grounds—the perfect setting for a picnic—are beautiful year-round, but they're nothing short of spectacular in mid-March, when the azaleas and dogwoods are in full bloom.

Edgar Allan Poe Cottage

Fordham

Although American author and poet Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, his final home was a cottage in the village of Fordham—now a neighborhood of the Bronx—where he lived with his young wife Virginia and her mother Maria Clemm. The 19th-century cottage has since been moved to a small green space now known as Poe Park, where it was restored and opened to the public in 2011 for literary and history buffs. You can learn all about the macabre writer who popularized the word "nevermore" with an audio tour by the Bronx County Historical Society.

Edgar Allan Poe Museum

Richmond's oldest residence, the Old Stone House in Shockoe Bottom, just west of Church Hill Historic District, now holds a museum honoring the famous writer. Poe grew up in Richmond, and although he never lived in this early- to mid-18th-century structure, his disciples have made it a monument with some of the writer's possessions on display.

1914 E. Main St., Richmond, VA, 23223, USA
804-648–5523
Sight Details
$6
Tues.–Sat. 10–5, Sun. 11–5. Guided tours on the hr; last tour departs at 4
Closed Mon.

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Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site

Northern Liberties

One of America's most original writers, Edgar Allan Poe (1809–49), lived here from 1843 to 1844; it's the only one of his Philadelphia residences still standing. During that time some of his best-known short stories were published: "The Telltale Heart," "The Black Cat," and "The Gold Bug." You can tour the three-story brick house; to evoke the spirit of Poe, the National Park Service displays first-edition manuscripts and other rare books and offers interactive exhibits as well. An adjoining house has exhibits on Poe and his family, his work habits, and his literary contemporaries; there's also an eight-minute film and a small Poe library and reading room. A statue of a raven helps set the mood. The site is five blocks north of Market Street and just a stone's throw away from Spring Garden Street. SEPTA bus 47 travels on 7th Street to Green Street, where you should disembark.

532 N. 7th St., Philadelphia, PA, 19123, USA
215-597–8780
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon.–Thurs.

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Edgar Degas House Museum, Courtyard, and Inn

Tremé

The Impressionist Edgar Degas, whose Creole mother and grandmother were born in New Orleans, stayed with his cousins in this house during an 1872 visit to New Orleans, producing 18 paintings and four drawings while here. "This is a new style of painting," Degas wrote in one of the five known letters he sent from New Orleans, explaining that the breakthrough he experienced here led to "better art." Today, this house museum and bed-and-breakfast offers public tours, given by Degas's great-grandnieces, which include the screening of an award-winning film on Degas's family and their sojourn in New Orleans, plus a walk through the historic neighborhood focusing on details from the artist's letters. In 2019, the site was designated as a French monument by the French ambassador to the United States. Feel free to drop by for a look if you're in the vicinity, but check the website or call ahead for event dates or to make an appointment for a full tour.

2306 Esplanade Ave., New Orleans, LA, 70119, USA
504-821–5009
Sight Details
$29 for guided tour

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Edmondston-Alston House

In 1825, Charles Edmondston designed this house in the Federal style on Charleston's High Battery; it was built by the labor of enslaved people, who also lived and worked on the property. About 13 years later, second owner Charles Alston began transforming it into the Greek Revival structure seen today, also by using the labor of enslaved people. The home is furnished with family antiques, portraits, silver, and fine china; the stories of the enslaved people who lived here are intertwined with many of the exhibits.

21 E. Battery, Charleston, SC, 29401, USA
843-722–7171
Sight Details
$15
Closed Sun.

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Edsel & Eleanor Ford House

Ford's son Edsel built the Edsel & Eleanor Ford House, a 60-room Cotswold-style residence on 87 acres. Albert Kahn designed the 1929 home, which boasts a large collection of original antiques and art as well as extensive gardens.

1100 Lakeshore Rd., Grosse Pointe Shores, MI, 48236, USA
313-884--4222
Sight Details
$12
Closed Mon.

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Eisenhower National Historic Site

The farm residence of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who bought it in 1950, was a weekend retreat and a meeting place for world leaders. The property adjoins the battlefield and the brick-and-stone farmhouse is preserved in 1950s style. Free home tours are conducted Thursday through Sunday, and seasonal walking tours of the farm are offered once a week.

250 Eisenhower Farm Rd., Gettysburg, PA, 17325, USA
717-338–9114
Sight Details
Free
House closed Mon.–Wed. and Dec.--Feb.
Grounds are open to the public Mar.--Nov.

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El Solano

No Palm Beach mansion better represents the town's luminous legacy than the Spanish-style home built by Addison Mizner as his own residence in 1925. Mizner later sold El Solano to Harold Vanderbilt, and the property was long a favorite among socialites for parties and photo shoots. Vanderbilt held many a gala fundraiser here. Beatle John Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono, bought it less than a year before Lennon's death. It's still privately owned and not open to the public, but it's well worth a drive-by on any self-guided Palm Beach mansion tour.

720 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach, FL, 33480, USA

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Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site

An unpretentious cottage, Val-Kill was first a retreat and later the full-time residence for Eleanor Roosevelt. A biographical film, First Lady of the World, is shown at the site. The property encompasses 180 acres of trails and gardens. It's also the location of Val-Kill Industries, Eleanor's attempt to prevent farm workers from relocating to the city for employment; reproductions of early American furniture, pewter, and weavings were produced here.

56 Valkill Park Rd., Hyde Park, NY, 12538, USA
845-229–9115
Sight Details
Tour $10
May.–Oct., daily 9–5; Nov.–Apr., Thurs.–Mon. Tours at 1 and 3

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Elisabet Ney Museum

North Austin

The historic home and studio of sculptor Elisabet Ney is a lovely gem in the Hyde Park neighborhood that showcases Ney's life and work, with more than 70 sculptures on display. Ney's studio, where she produced sculptures of historic figures, like Stephen F. Austin and Sam Houston, is set up as she would have had it, with sculpting tools, hat, teacup, and other items all in their proper places. The castle-like home is surrounded by native prairie grasses and more outdoor sculptures. Check their online events calendar for well-attended community events, family-friendly art classes, nature walks, and seasonal festivals.

304 E. 44th St., Austin, TX, 78751, USA
512-974–1625
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Elizabeth Cady Stanton House

The meticulously restored Elizabeth Cady Stanton House is where one of American feminism's most important leaders shaped social reform as she raised seven children. Stanton's feminist colleague, Susan B. Anthony of Rochester, was a guest in the house. A tour helps you to understand Stanton's charisma and power. The house, a mile east of the Declaration Park and visitor center (across the canal), is open early March through mid-December, with tours daily at 11:15 and 2:15 and more frequently in summer.

32 Washington St., Seneca Falls, NY, 13148, USA
315-568--0024
Sight Details
Free

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