Weirs Farm National Historic Site

Visiting historic places was a cornerstone of our homeschooling journey when our daughters were young. We crossed the country together, discovering National Historic Sites and learning the stories that shaped our nation.

Here in New England, Weir Farm in Connecticut remains one of the few National Parks in this state and is the only National Park in the entire country dedicated to American painting. Nestled in Wilton, it became a refuge and sanctuary for Julian Alden Weir, one of the founding figures of American Impressionism. Weir purchased the farm in 1882, and its meadows, stone walls, gardens and soft New England light that became the inspiration for many of his works.

Weir Farm became a part of a remarkable circle of artists who helped define American Impressionism. His close friends and fellow painters, Childe Hassam and John Henry Twachtman, often painted at the farm. Hassam is considered one of America’s greatest impressionists and Twachtman is another leading member of the movement.

One of the most touching details of the property is the inscription painted above the door:
“Here shall we rest and call content our home.“
It captures the heart of what Weir Farm meant to the artists who gathered there.

Their time at Weir Farm helped shape an important chapter in American art, turning this quiet Connecticut homestead into one of the country’s most significant creative colonies. This site is a living testament to their work and to the enduring power of landscape and the American artistic tradition.
Read More From Nancy
Hamilton Grange National Memorial
For those who have seen the musical Hamilton, do you remember the moment when the family “moves uptown? In the late 18th century, uptown meant leaving the crowded streets of lower Manhattan for open farmland to the north. This are would later become Harlem. That is where Alexander Hamilton built his country retreat, a house known […]
Women’s Rights National Historical Park
Driving across upstate New York is full of history, landmarks, and monuments. A brown National Park sign in Seneca Falls led me to the Women’s Rights Museum, and like any new place, that first visit left me with a lot to take in. I did not know then about the convention that had taken place here. […]
Roger Williams National Memorial
Roger Williams National Memorial in Providence, Rhode Island preserves the legacy of a man whose ideas helped shape one of the most enduring principles of American life: religious freedom. Roger Williams arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1631 and quickly became known for his uncompromising beliefs. He argued that civil government should not enforce […]