There are places you visit, and then there are places that stop you cold the moment you walk through the door. The Reitz Home Museum, tucked into the elegant Riverside Historic District just blocks from the Ohio River, is firmly in that second category. From the moment you set eyes on its French Second Empire facade — all mansard roof, ornate dormers, and cast-iron cresting against the Evansville skyline — you understand that you are standing in front of something genuinely extraordinary.
Built in 1871 for John Augustus Reitz, one of the most prominent lumber barons of the Midwest, this sprawling 16-room mansion was designed to impress, and more than 150 years later, it absolutely still does. Reitz made his fortune supplying hardwood to a rapidly industrializing nation, and he poured that wealth into every square inch of this home. The result is one of the most authentically preserved Victorian interiors you will find anywhere in the country — not a recreation, not a suggestion, but the real thing.
Guided tours run regularly throughout the week, and they are worth every minute. Knowledgeable docents walk you through room after opulent room, pointing out hand-painted ceilings, original gas chandeliers converted to electricity, intricate parquet floors, and furniture that has never left the house. The parlor alone could make a grown adult weep with its carved walnut woodwork and velvet draperies that look as though the Reitz family simply stepped out for an afternoon and forgot to come back.
What sets this museum apart from so many historic house museums is the depth of the story being told. The guides connect the family’s personal history to the broader arc of Evansville’s rise as a river and manufacturing powerhouse in the latter half of the 19th century. You leave understanding not just a house, but a city and an era.
The Reitz Home sits at 224 Southeast First Street, an easy walk from the riverfront and the downtown core. Admission is modest — typically under ten dollars for adults — and the museum offers special seasonal events throughout the year, including a beloved Victorian Christmas celebration in December that transforms the house into something out of a Dickens illustration. If you time your visit right, that alone is worth the trip.
Evansville has a lot of history to offer, but very little of it is as tactile, as intimate, or as beautifully intact as what you will find inside the Reitz Home. Whether you are a dedicated history enthusiast or simply someone who appreciates exceptional craftsmanship and a well-told story, this is a stop you will not regret making. Block out at least ninety minutes, wear comfortable shoes, and prepare to be genuinely moved by the past.