Explore the Attractions of the Brandywine Treasure Trail Passport

Whether you’re planning a summer getaway with old friends or a relaxing escape while the kids are at camp, the Brandywine Valley will rejuvenate you. Renowned for its cultural attractions, glorious gardens, elegant mansions, and superb museums, Wilmington and the Brandywine Valley offer a trove of new delights each and every year. Best of all, the 12 must-visit destinations below can all be visited for one low price when you purchase a Brandywine Treasure Trail Passport.

We invite you to explore what the attractions of the Brandywine Treasure Trail Passport have in store for you...
 

Brandywine Museum of Art

  • 1 Hoffman's Mill Rd.

Discover an outstanding collection of American art housed in a 19th-century mill with a dramatic steel and glass addition overlooking the banks of the Brandywine River. Renowned for its holdings of…

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A few miles outside of Wilmington, the Brandywine Museum of Art is set among trees and flowers along the Brandywine river. The former 19th-century mill now includes a modern steel and glass addition, and the illustrious collection within is celebrated for including the work of three generations of Wyeth family art: N. C., Andrew, and Jamie Wyeth. Once inside, the carefully curated collection of American art includes a special focus on art from the Brandywine Valley.

Not to Miss

Explore the inspiration for many of artist Andrew Wyeth’s paintings at Kuerner Farm, a 10-minute drive from the museum. Docent-led tours make connections between Wyeth’s work and actual sites on the property. Look out at the world from the vantage point of the boy who would develop into the artist, and begin to understand why the house and farm fascinated the painter from childhood. Perhaps walking those floors, absorbing those views, or breathing the air that lambs and cows and barnyard cats breathed helped make Wyeth into the artist he became.

Delaware Art Museum

  • 2301 Kentmere Pkwy.

Explore reimagined art galleries, a spacious sculpture garden and labyrinth, and spectacular special exhibitions. The Delaware Art Museum is best known for its large collection of British…

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The Delaware Art Museum features many pre-Raphaelite visionaries—it’s the largest collection outside of the British Isles—and the sculpture gardens provide a beautiful outdoor backdrop for some attention-grabbing three-dimensional pieces.

Not to Miss

The Howard Pyle collection showcases the drawings and paintings of Howard Pyle, whose images were published in Harper’s Monthly, among others. Pyle was the father of American illustration and taught the aforementioned N. C. Wyeth. Vincent van Gogh was a fan.

The Delaware Contemporary

  • 200 S. Madison St.

Explore contemporary art and stimulate your creativity with our always-changing, thought-provoking exhibitions, events, and programs! The Delaware Contemporary houses 7 galleries, 26 artist studios…

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Although the Brandywine Trail is steeped in history, it makes room for modern as well. This contemporary art museum reminds Brandywine Trail blazers that Wilmington is not only about the past through 30 exhibitions that showcase the abstract and the thought-provoking.

Not to Miss

The Delaware Contemporary presents exhibitions of regionally, nationally, and internationally recognized artists that explore topical issues in contemporary art and society, including the West Street Art Festival held in June. This is a day of creative fun featuring indoor and outdoor art-based activities, performances, vendors, food trucks, and refreshments.

Delaware History Museum

  • 505 N Market St

Come explore the many stories of the First State at the Delaware History Museum, which also includes the Jane and Littleton Mitchell Center for African American Heritage. The Delaware History Museum…

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This art-deco building once housed a Woolworth's Department Store in the 1940's, today Delaware History Museum uses an overarching theme of "Delaware: One State, Many Stories," to tell the state's history through topics that include Delaware's immigrant history, maritime heritage, agricultural roots, and Wilmington's transformation from industrial hub to financial center. 

Not to Miss

Housed within the Delaware History Museum is the Mitchell Center for African American Heritage. Sharing the museum's theme, the exhibit Journey to Freedom presents compelling perspectives of African Americans’ struggles for human rights, freedom, and dignity in Delaware and the nation.

Delaware Museum of Nature and Science

  • 4840 Kennett Pike

Please Note: Museum will be closed Tuesday,September 5 through Friday, September 8, 2023. Explore immersive ecosystems from Delaware and around the world at the Delaware Museum of Nature and Science…

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The Delaware Museum of Natural History has made a huge metamorphosis and reemerged as The Delaware Museum of Nature & Science in 2022. This new configuration of the well-known and treasured museum will bring new significance to the wonders of science in the natural world. With a new café, Paleozone, Evolution Trail, and more, the Nature and Science Museum will spark creativity and curiosity for all types of adventurers.

Not to Miss

In the Global Journey Gallery, travel a giant floor map to explore our planet’s ecosystems. The map is surrounded by recreations of three different land-based ecosystems (tropical rainforest, Arctic tundra and African savanna), plus three different ocean environments. What better way to dive into nature’s diversity and experience how we’re all connected? 

Hagley Museum and Library

  • 200 Hagley Creek Rd.

Hagley is a large, indoor-outdoor museum experience with hundreds of years of history. Explore the new Nation of Inventors exhibition celebrating diverse stories of American innovation. Join…

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The Hagley Museum & Library—a gorgeous mansion, museum, library, and former business on manicured grounds—draws visitors into a time long past. Walk through the story, business offices, and homestead of the du Pont family, whose company supplied more than half of the black powder used by the Union Army in the Civil War, as well as the dynamite that was used to build railroads across the West. Other highlights include permanent and changing exhibits, as well as the library, a renowned research center dedicated to preserving the history of American business.

Not to Miss

The Powder Yard. The museum tells a story of an American family, but it also tells the story of work that mattered, of men who spent their days toiling in explosive dust. Exploring their workspace also reveals the ingenuity of early American engineering, the millworks, cogs, wheels, tracks with moving carts, and massive drill bits, all set in a historic building next to the running water that made it possible.

Longwood Gardens

  • 1001 Longwood Rd.

Explore one of the great gardens of the world, featuring 1,100 acres of meadows, gardens, and woodlands including a 4-acre Conservatory. With dazzling horticulture displays, majestic fountains and…

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These are no ordinary gardens—most think gardens such as these only exist on the grounds of castles or British manors. The extraordinary Longwood Gardens is a multiple-time winner of Best Botanical Garden as voted by readers of USA TODAY and 10Best, and feature the Longwood Hybrid Cineraria, a cheerful bloom dressed in bold periwinkle created by the Longwood horticulturists. It is just one of the 11,000 plants that can be found in the outdoor gardens. Follow paths through sprawling fields of blooms in a rainbow of colors, below fluffy trees, and past expertly trimmed hedges in fun shapes.

Not to Miss

The Conservatory, an indoor shelter with 20 different gardens, allowed the du Pont family to enjoy nature, even in a cold Northeast winter. You may forget you are inside as you walk past flowing water and plants as thick as a jungle landscape. The mushroom-shaped sculpture dotted with nearly 1,000 pale chrysanthemum blooms takes the stage, leaving viewers in awe at the marriage of natural beauty and artistic design.

NOTE: Passport admission to Longwood Gardens is only available through September 30, 2024.

Mt. Cuba Center

  • 3120 Barley Mill Rd.

Please Note: Our Gardens are closed for the season. Join us for the 2024 season starting April 3. Voted “Best Botanical Garden” in the 2020 USA Today 10Best Reader’s Choice Awards, Mt. Cuba Center is…

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The Mt. Cuba Center further indulges a love of gardens. The gardens here are less manicured around the ponds, lending to the idea that you’ve stumbled upon this surprising beauty while on a stroll. Sit back and admire trees that stretch their limbs luxuriously, seeming to gaze at their reflections on the placid surface of the pond below.

Not to Miss

The trees along the Dogwood Path also seem to have come to life, reaching out to each other above a carpet of green grass below. The winding path seems to invite visitors to venture forward into the peaceful wilderness. The blooming trees definitely make this a favorite spot among all of the natural beauty contained at Mt. Cuba.

Nemours Estate

  • 1600 Rockland Rd

Please note: Nemours Estate is now closed for the season and will reopen on April 2, 2024. Explore the elegance of a 77-room Mansion, a Chauffeur's Garage with vintage automobiles, and 200-acres of…

About

Du Pont is a name that you hear a lot along the Brandywine Treasure Trail. The Nemours Mansion is the former home of Alfred du Pont. There is something passionate about the opulence here, making it no surprise to hear that Alfred du Pont built the house as a gift for his second wife, Alicia. She loved 18th-century French architecture, and the stunning home was modeled after Versailles. The gardens utilize a French design as well, with the work of French sculptors Prosper Lecourtier and Henri Crenier making it lushly magnificent.

Not to Miss

Achievement, a towering golden sculpture on a marble pedestal, provides a centerpiece for the grounds opposite the romantic façade of a mansion that makes you feel like you’ve been transported to another time and place. The long pool and 157 jets spraying in a choreographed arc are a mere prelude.

Read House & Gardens

  • 42 The Strand

Overlooking the Delaware River in Historic New Castle, the 14,000-square-foot George Read II House & Gardens is preserved as a National Historic Landmark and a beacon of design inspiration. It was…

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Read House and the historic village where it’s located take us back to America in its infancy. You might not guess from the Read House’s stalwart appearance, but the inside speaks of elegance, from the furnishings to the wistful Delaware River views. The gardens provide a final lesson in Colonial history—beneath their carefully manicured beauty, archaeologists have discovered artifacts that have brought the lives of the people who lived there over the centuries to light.

Not to Miss

NOT TO MISS: Before reaching the Read House, stroll down cobblestone streets in Historic New Castle, take a turn on the town green, and admire many historic buildings that are still in perfect shape after hundreds of years of use. The red brick house off of The Strand is a stone’s throw from taverns where Revolutionary War heroes quenched their thirst and colonial merchants pedaled their wares.

Rockwood Park & Museum

  • 4651 Washington St. Extension

Tour this marvelous Rural Gothic mansion which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Enjoy the Victorian house museum and roam 72 acres of serene parkland.

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Rockwood Park provides plenty of trails for walking enthusiasts to meander down, each outfitted with its fair share of greenery and eye-pleasing views. The museum is fascinating in its own right, providing a picture of yet another era of life in Delaware through the Bringhurst family’s 20th-century furnishings and photographs.

Not to Miss

The ultimate treat, The Delaware Shakespeare Festival’s performance, is held each summer in the park. Audience members sit on blankets or lawn chairs and eat a picnic before the performance, and then watch as the actors bring the Bard to life in the open air of a Wilmington evening.

Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library

  • 5105 Kennett Pike

Nestled in the rolling hills of the Brandywine Valley, Winterthur is a historic estate on par with some of the most famous estates in the country, such as Biltmore Estate, The Breakers, and…

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The Winterthur house represents another chapter in the du Pont family history—the childhood home of Henry Francis du Pont. Today, it is a garden bursting with color, a library established to facilitate studies of American art, and a museum that houses one of the most important collections of Americana in the United States.

Not to Miss

The Campbell Collection of Soup Tureens, an entire collection of impossibly elegant, covered dishes for soup. The collection was originally assembled by Campbell’s Soup Company but found its home in the Winterthur Museum, a fitting addition to a home where people have always been welcomed and entertained in lavish style.