Tucked along Embassy Row on Massachusetts Avenue NW, Anderson House is the kind of place that makes you stop mid-stride and wonder how you never knew it existed. This Gilded Age mansion — a genuine Beaux-Arts palace completed in 1905 — operates as the headquarters and museum of the Society of the Cincinnati, America’s oldest patriotic organization, founded by officers of the Revolutionary War. And here is the truly remarkable part: admission is completely free.
Walking through the front doors feels less like entering a museum and more like being granted private access to a European ambassador’s residence. The grand staircase alone is worth the trip — a sweeping double flight of marble flanked by iron railings and lit by windows that cast a warm, golden light across the stone. Every room unfolds with fresh drama: hand-painted ceilings, tapestries woven in Brussels, a billiard room paneled in carved walnut, and a ballroom that still hums with the memory of Washington society at its most elegant.
What distinguishes Anderson House from other historic homes in the city is the sheer depth of its collections. The museum holds an extraordinary assemblage of Revolutionary War artifacts, including swords, portraits, medals, and manuscripts that trace the founding of the new republic through the lives of the men who fought for it. You will find Gilbert Stuart portraits, rare printed documents, and decorative arts spanning two continents — because Ambassador Larz Anderson and his wife Isabel traveled the world and brought it home with them. The Japanese Room alone, adorned with lacquerwork and silk screens they collected during a diplomatic posting in Tokyo, feels like a quiet detour into another world entirely.
The surrounding Dupont Circle neighborhood only adds to the appeal. After your visit, Massachusetts Avenue spills into one of Washington’s most walkable stretches, lined with embassies, independent bookshops, and excellent coffee. A short stroll brings you to Kramerbooks, a beloved DC institution, or any number of terrific restaurants around the Dupont Circle fountain.
Anderson House offers free guided tours on select days, and the knowledgeable docents genuinely love what they do — they will tell you stories about the Anderson family that no placard could ever capture. The house is open Tuesday through Sunday, and the crowds are refreshingly modest, meaning you can linger in a doorway, study a painting, or simply sit quietly in one of the gilded reception rooms and absorb the atmosphere without being hurried along.
Washington is full of monuments built to be seen from a distance. Anderson House is something rarer: a monument built to be lived in. Come and see what that feels like.