There is a particular kind of afternoon that Washington does better than almost any city in the world — the kind where you stumble into somewhere extraordinary and quietly wonder why the whole country isn’t talking about it. That is exactly what happens when you visit Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens, tucked into the verdant upper reaches of Rock Creek Park in the elegant Friendship Heights neighborhood. This place is a revelation.
Hillwood was the lifelong passion project of Marjorie Merriweather Post, the cereal heiress, socialite, and genuinely formidable woman who spent decades assembling what became the finest private collection of Russian imperial art outside of Russia itself. Fabergé eggs, imperial porcelain, Orthodox icons glittering with gold and gemstones — the collection reads like a fever dream, and yet every single piece is real, meticulously documented, and displayed with extraordinary care inside Post’s Georgian Revival mansion. Walking through the grand rooms feels less like visiting a museum and more like being invited into the home of someone with impeccable taste and essentially unlimited resources. The difference matters. The rooms breathe. The furniture is placed the way she placed it. You can almost hear the clink of cocktail glasses.
But let’s talk about the grounds, because they are worth the trip on their own. Post had twenty-five acres landscaped into a series of distinct garden rooms, each with its own personality. The French Parterre is formal and symmetrical, the kind of garden that makes you stand up a little straighter. The Japanese-style garden is contemplative and serene, built around a koi pond that has the remarkable ability to slow your heart rate by approximately ten beats per minute. In spring, the cutting garden erupts in color, and in autumn, the woodland paths through the property glow with copper and gold. There is honestly no bad season to visit.
One of Hillwood’s best-kept secrets is the Café, which serves a proper afternoon tea experience with finger sandwiches, scones, and seasonal pastries. It books up — so plan ahead — but even a casual coffee on the terrace overlooking the gardens is a small luxury that costs almost nothing and delivers an enormous amount of pleasure.
The estate is also home to a dedicated dog museum (yes, Post adored her dogs with the intensity of a true eccentric), a greenhouse filled with exotic orchids, and rotating temporary exhibitions that give you a genuine reason to return season after season.
Admission is modest, parking is available on site, and the whole experience runs about two to three hours if you take your time. Take your time. Hillwood rewards the unhurried visitor with details that lesser eyes would miss — a monogram worked into a door handle, a centuries-old tapestry catching afternoon light, a garden bench positioned just so to frame a perfect view.
Washington is full of grand institutions and monumental ambition. Hillwood offers something rarer: intimacy, beauty, and the distinct feeling that someone truly loved this place. Come and see why.