Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site
Visiting Val-Kill in Hyde Park is special to me. Eleanor Roosevelt is a woman I admire, for her courage and for how she grew into the role she eventually played on the world’s stage.

Val-Kill was not created as a grand residence. In the 1920, it began as a small furniture workshop, part of Eleanor’s effort to support local craftspeople and community development. Over time, it evolved into her personal retreat, a place separate from the larger Roosevelt estate, where she could shape her own environment.
After the death of Franklin Roosevelt in 1945, this became her full-time home. It was here that she lived the remainder of her life.
The house itself is modent and reflects her values: practical, thoughtful and unpretentious. Yet within these walls, important work took place. This was the house where she wrote, where she continued her advocacy and where she met with dignitaries from around the world including world leaders and a young John F. Kennedy.

After her death in 1962, the significance of Val-Kill was recognized and preserved. The site was established as the Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site in 1977 and maintained by the National Park Service.
I have visited her home a few times and walking through her house and grounds it becomes clear how this is more than a residence. It is a reflection of the woman who lived here and her independence, purpose and her ability to shape a life that extended far beyond these quiet surroundings.
Read More From Nancy
Hillwood Estate
While we were at a convention just outside of Washington, D.C., we took a morning to drive over to this house, not only was the home beautiful, so was the collection inside it. Hillwood Estate was the residence of Marjorie Merriweather Post, the heiress to the Post cereal fortune and one of the wealthiest women in America in […]
Home of Victor Hugo
The home of Victor Hugo offers a rare opportunity to step directly into the life of one of France’s greatest literary figures. This apartment is where Hugo lived from 1832 to 1848, some of his most productive and significant periods of his career. It was here that he wrote, entertained and lived as a central figure in […]
L. Ron Hubbard Home
On our last morning in Washington, D.C., Marty and i visited the former home of L. Ron Hubbard. Today, the house is preserved as part of the early history of Scientology and is referred to as the Founding Church of Scientology. During the mid-1950s, this house served as both residence and workplace for Hubbard at a pivotal time […]