Historic Homes Foundation
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Thomas Edison House. Home of the inventor who worked in Louisville as a telegrapher from 1866-67.
http://www.edisonhouse.org
Liberty Hall Historic Site, Frankfort, Kentucky
Liberty Hall Historic Site was home to Kentucky's first U.S. Senator, John Brown, and his family. The site was also home to another U.S. Senator, a Vice-Presidential candidate, a Governor of Missouri, a Commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a French Ambassador, a U.S. District Attorney, three U.S. Army colonels, and a beloved children's author Margaret Wise Brown
https://www.libertyhall.org/
Conrad-Caldwell House Museum
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Conrad-Caldwell House Museum. Richardsonian Romanesque style architecture house was built for Theophilus Conrad, who made his fortune in the tanning business.
https://www.conradcaldwell.org/
Bonnet House Museum and Gardens
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Bonnet House Museum and Gardens. Information provided on collection, exhibits, events, tours and membership.
https://www.bonnethouse.org/
Molly Brown House Museum
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Molly Brown House Museum. Learn about the life and times of Unsinkable Molly Brown in her restored Victorian home in Denver, Colorado.
https://mollybrown.org/
Rancho Camulos Museum - Home Page
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Rancho Camulos Museum. A 40 acre National Historic Landmark, situated within an 1800 acre working ranch.
https://www.ranchocamulos.org/
Oneida Community Mansion House
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Oneida Community Mansion House. National Historic Landmark.
https://www.oneidacommunity.org/
George W. Bush Childhood Home
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - George W. Bush Childhood Home. Tells the story of the Bush Family and the childhood of George W.
http://bushchildhoodhome.org
Welcome to Tudor Place
Reference, Museums, History, Historic Houses - Tudor Place. House of architectural distinction lived in by six generations of the same family from 1805 to 1984.
https://tudorplace.org/