Historic Homes as Living Art: Interiors That Preserve America's Past
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Historic Homes as Living Art: Interiors That Preserve America's Past



Historic homes offer much more than weathered walls and old, creaky floorboards. When properly preserved, they are living works of art. Every carved banister, hand-laid tile, stained-glass window, and carefully restored wallpaper tells a story about the people who once lived there and the eras they helped shape. Across America, preservationists work to protect not just the architecture of these homes, but the interiors that give them life.

Some of the United States’ most fascinating historic homes carry especially dark histories, where tragedy and preservation exist side by side. Yet it’s often those carefully maintained interiors—the furniture, décor, and craftsmanship—that allow visitors to step directly into the past. Three striking examples are the Lizzie Borden House, the Villisca Axe Murder House, and the Brickhouse Inn with its adjoining Welty House.

Lizzie Borden House


The Lizzie Borden House – Copyright US Ghost Adventures

Built in the mid-19th century and purchased by Andrew Borden in 1872, the Lizzie Borden House remains one of America’s most infamous homes. It was here, in 1892, that Andrew and Abby Borden were brutally murdered in one of the nation’s most enduring unsolved mysteries.

But beyond its criminal legacy, the house is a remarkable preservation of Victorian domestic life.

Its narrow hallways, horsehair furniture, floral wallpaper, and modest room arrangements reflect the practical middle-class New England aesthetic of the era. Unlike many wealthy homes of the time, Andrew Borden refused modern conveniences like indoor plumbing and electricity, making the preserved interior feel even more authentic.

Walking through the home feels like stepping into a Victorian photograph. It’s dim, restrained, and heavy with atmosphere. Preservationists have intentionally restored rooms to resemble their appearance in 1892, down to period furnishings and decorative details.

The artistry here lies in simplicity. The craftsmanship of the woodwork, the formal parlor layout, and the functional design tell us just as much about Victorian life as any museum could.

Villisca Axe Murder House


The Villisca Axe Murder House – Copyright US Ghost Adventures

If the Lizzie Borden House captures Victorian America, the Villisca Axe Murder House preserves early 20th-century rural life in chilling detail.

Built in 1900, the modest farmhouse became infamous after the unsolved 1912 murders of the Moore family and two houseguests. In the 1990s, the home was painstakingly restored to its 1912 appearance, removing modern plumbing and electricity to return it to its original state.

That restoration transformed the home into a living artifact. The house’s interior is strikingly humble: iron bedsteads, lace curtains, wood-burning fixtures, and narrow stairways reflect the practical design of Midwestern family life. Unlike grand mansions, its artistry lies in ordinary craftsmanship. It showcases the domestic details of yesteryear that are often lost to modernization.

The Villisca home’s untouched atmosphere offers an unusually intimate look into early American home life. The creak of the floors, the close quarters, and the restored layout remind visitors that history didn’t only happen in mansions or battlefields. Every detail is preserved in this old house. It looks almost exactly as it did the day of the infamous murders.

Brickhouse Inn / Welty House


The Brickhouse Inn – Copyright US Ghost Adventures

In Gettysburg, the Brickhouse Inn and neighboring Welty House offer a different kind of preserved history. The past of this structure is rooted in war, hospitality, and Victorian refinement. Located near the battlefield, these historic homes date back to the mid-1800s and served as witnesses to the Battle of Gettysburg. Their interiors preserve both wartime scars and period elegance.

Unlike the stark realism of Villisca, the Brickhouse Inn embraces decorative beauty. Behold the ornate fireplaces, polished hardwood floors, antique furnishings, elaborate moldings, and richly patterned textiles. Every room reflects the layered artistry of Victorian design.

The Welty House, with its preserved brickwork and historic furnishings, showcases how homes in Gettysburg became temporary hospitals, shelters, and survival spaces during battle. Even the building’s interior design reflects resilience. Decorative arts—such as hand-carved furniture, oil lamps, brass bedframes, and original architectural detailing—create an immersive timeline where history and design overlap.

America’s Preserved Past

Historic preservation often focuses on exterior architecture. But it’s the interiors of these restored structures that tell the human story. Wallpaper patterns reveal changing tastes. Furniture placement reflects social customs. Carpentry details show the skill of forgotten craftsmen. Every preserved room is a time capsule.

Homes like the Lizzie Borden House, Villisca Axe Murder House, and Brickhouse Inn remind us that history is not just something we read. Through preservation efforts, we can more or less step right back into another time. These homes are living art. They preserve imperfect human stories in wood, fabric, paint, and stone. And in doing so, they keep America’s past alive, one room at a time.










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