There is a moment, just as you pass through the iron gates and catch your first full view of Salisbury House rising above its wooded hillside, when you genuinely forget you are standing in Des Moines, Iowa. The 42-room Tudor manor looks as though it was lifted whole from the English countryside and set down quietly in the Salisbury Oaks neighborhood on the city’s south side — and that, as it turns out, is almost exactly what happened.
Carl Weeks, a self-made cosmetics magnate who built his fortune selling Armand brand face powder in the 1920s, commissioned the house in 1923 with one audacious instruction: make it feel authentically old. Weeks and his wife Edith traveled repeatedly to England, purchasing entire sections of genuine 15th and 16th century structures — timber, stone, brick, carved woodwork, leaded glass windows — and shipping them back to Des Moines to be incorporated into the new construction. The result is a home that doesn’t merely evoke the past. It contains it.
Walking through Salisbury House today feels less like a museum tour and more like a treasure hunt. The Great Hall soars overhead with a hammer-beam ceiling salvaged from an English church. A bedroom fireplace is flanked by tiles that once warmed a Tudor manor across the Atlantic. The library holds rare books, including a leaf from a Gutenberg Bible and a first edition of John Milton’s Paradise Lost, displayed with the casual confidence of someone who simply loved beautiful things. Weeks wasn’t curating a collection for show — he was building a life inside history, and you feel that intimacy in every room.
Guided tours run Tuesday through Saturday and typically last about an hour. The guides here are genuinely knowledgeable and enthusiastic, the kind who can answer a follow-up question without missing a beat. Tours are affordable — generally under fifteen dollars for adults — and the experience is worth several times that. If you visit in the warmer months, linger afterward in the gardens, which slope gracefully down from the house and include a reflecting pool and mature specimen trees that give the whole property a serene, unhurried atmosphere.
Salisbury House also hosts a wonderful schedule of seasonal events throughout the year, from a beloved holiday candlelight tour each December to summer concerts on the grounds. Checking their events calendar before your visit is well worth the two minutes it takes — you may find yourself planning your entire trip around what’s on.
Des Moines has no shortage of things worth doing, but Salisbury House occupies a category almost entirely its own. It is a place where genuine history, personal obsession, and architectural beauty converge in a way that is rare anywhere in the Midwest — and very few visitors leave without saying some version of the same thing: I had no idea this was here. Now you do.