There are places in a city that quietly hold its soul together, and in Des Moines, that place is Hoyt Sherman Place. Tucked into the historic Sherman Hill neighborhood just west of downtown, this stunning 1877 Italianate mansion — paired with a gorgeous 1,400-seat theater — is the kind of discovery that makes you feel like a local even on your first visit.
I stumbled onto Hoyt Sherman Place on a drizzly Tuesday afternoon, following a hand-painted sign I spotted near Woodland Avenue. What I found stopped me in my tracks: a sweeping front lawn, ornate brick architecture, and a sense of permanence that most cities would kill for. The building was once the private home of Hoyt Sherman, brother of Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman, and it has been lovingly stewarded ever since by the Des Moines Women’s Club, one of the oldest civic organizations in Iowa.
The mansion itself is open for self-guided tours, and I’d encourage you not to rush through it. The rooms are filled with 19th-century American and European art — oil paintings, sculptures, decorative objects — all displayed in their original Victorian context. It doesn’t feel like a museum in the sterile, hushed sense. It feels like someone brilliant and worldly actually lived here, and the curators have honored that spirit completely. The grand parlor alone, with its period furniture and tall arched windows filtering afternoon light, is worth the short drive from downtown.
But the real showstopper is the theater. Built as an addition in 1923, the Hoyt Sherman Place Theatre is one of those rooms that earns audible gasps when you walk in. The ceiling is vaulted and ornately detailed, the acoustics are genuinely exceptional, and the sight lines from nearly every seat are remarkable. The programming calendar leans eclectic in the best possible way — think national touring acts, jazz performances, comedy shows, and intimate concerts by artists who clearly relish playing a room this intimate and beautiful. I caught a singer-songwriter set there on a Friday night and it was one of the finest live music experiences I’ve had anywhere, not just in Iowa.
The surrounding Sherman Hill neighborhood deserves at least a slow walk before or after your visit. It’s one of Des Moines’ oldest residential districts, lined with Victorian and Queen Anne homes in various states of loving restoration. There are a handful of good restaurants and coffee shops within easy walking distance, making it simple to build a full afternoon or evening around your time here.
Parking is free and plentiful on the surrounding streets, and tickets for most theater events are reasonably priced — often well under what you’d pay for comparable programming in a larger city. The venue also hosts private events, so if you’re planning something special while you’re in town, it’s worth a call.
What Hoyt Sherman Place really offers is something increasingly rare: a living piece of history that hasn’t been sanitized or commercialized. It’s genuine, beautiful, and deeply woven into the fabric of Des Moines. Whether you’re stopping in for a tour on a quiet weekday or dressing up for a Saturday night concert, you’ll leave with the particular satisfaction of having found something real. That’s exactly the kind of travel memory worth making.