Thomas Edison’s Glenmont 

The Edison family home, known as Glenmont, located in West Orange, New Jersey. It was purchased in 1886 by Thomas Edison as a wedding gift for his second wife, Mina Miller. Set on more than a dozen acres of landscaped grounds, the large Queen Anne style mansion reflected both Eidson’s growing success and the elegance associated with wealthy American families during the late nineteenth century.

Unlike many grand estates built to impress visitors, this house feels also like a family home. The deep porches, carriage passageway, towers, and red exterior give it a welcoming appearance while still expressing the elaborate Victorian taste of the era. The grounds included gardens, greenhouses, walking paths and open lawns where the Edison children played and the family entertained guests.

Mina Edison played a major role in shaping the interiors which included elegant parlors, formal dining rooms, richly decorated bedrooms and spaces filled with fine furnishings and decorative arts popular during the Gilded Age. The home also reflected modern convenience for its time, incorporating electric lighting and other technologies connected to Edison’s work.

While Edison spent long hours in his nearby laboratory, Mina worked to create a stable and cultured home environment. Family dinners, holiday celebrations, and social gatherings all took place here. The estate became a retreat from the demands of Edison’s increasingly public and industrial world.

Glenmont feels like a preserved family estate where daily life once unfolded. The house tells a quieter story than the nearby laboratory. A story not of invention but of family, domestic life and the personal world behind one of America’s most famous names. Even the people who changed the world returned home each night to the same rhythms of family, comfort and everyday life that connects us all.