Press Kit
Estate Overview
Marjorie Merriweather Post: Biography & Collecting History
Highlights of the Russian Collection
Highlights of the French Decorative Arts
New Acquisitions
Hillwood Mansion & Collections Restoration
Hillwood Gardens Restoration
Fact Sheet: Hillwood Museum & Gardens
   



n integral component of the renovation and restoration of Hillwood Museum and Gardens was the extensive work done on the designed gardens that surround the mansion. In planning the gardens in the 1950s, Marjorie Merriweather Post consulted with well-known landscape architects Umberto Innocenti and Richard Webel of Long Island, NY and local landscape architect Perry Wheeler, who assisted with the establishment of the Rose Garden at the White House. The original plan combines twelve acres of formal gardens with thirteen acres of native woodland beyond.

Hillwood’s gardens include a circular rose garden, where Floribunda roses bloom around a granite monument holding Mrs. Post’s ashes; a "Friendship Walk," dedicated to Mrs. Post for her philanthropic generosity by a group of friends; a formal French parterre just outside the drawing room of the mansion; a large crescent-shaped lunar lawn; a Japanese-style garden and waterfalls representing a mountain landscape in miniature; a greenhouse for orchids; a large cutting garden; and a pet cemetery with small inscribed tombstones and statues of dogs. The garden walkways are accessible to visitors with disabilities.

Fact Sheet
Project Name: Hillwood Museum and Gardens Former estate of Marjorie Merriweather Post
Reopening Date: September 26, 2000 (public opening)
September 11, 2000 (press preview)
Location: 4155 Linnean Avenue NW, Washington, D.C.
Overlooking Rock Creek Park
Renovation and Restoration Project: Phase three of an extensive multi-phase facilities master plan included major structural repair, renovation of the mansion interiors, conservation of select objects on display, the addition of enhanced visitor services, and restoration of the estate's landscaped gardens.
Project Cost: $ 9,000,000
Collections: One of the premier art collector's house museums in the United States, Hillwood features Marjorie Merriweather Post's renowned personal collections of fine and decorative arts, including the most comprehensive collection of 18th- and 19th-century Russian imperial art outside of Russia, and one of the world's most important collections of French decorative art.
Collection Highlights: Russian: An 1884 diamond crown worn by Empress Alexandra upon her marriage to Nicholas II; a comprehensive collection of approximately 80 works by Carl Fabergé, including two imperial Easter eggs; an I.W. Buch gold chalice with diamonds and carved stones commissioned by Catherine the Great; Russian porcelain from the 18th-20th centuries from both imperial and private factories; and a selection of Russian Orthodox icons and religious objects.

French: An extensive collection of 18th-century French furnishings, tapestries, and porcelain, including furniture by such masters as Jean-Henri Riesener and David Roentgen; Sèvres porcelain; objects d'art by Louis Cartier; and spectacular Beauvais tapestries designed by François Boucher that later inspired works by Fabergé and Sèvres.

Mrs. Post's Collecting History: Marjorie Merriweather Post (1887-1973), the only child of cereal magnate C.W. Post, was a pioneer collector who assembled Russian imperial art long before it was widely recognized in the West. She acquired the nucleus of her collection while living in Russia during the late 1930s. Prior to this, in the 1920s, she consulted with Sir Joseph Duveen, a specialist in Old Master paintings and decorative arts, to expand her French decorative furniture and arts holdings. As her collections continued to grow in size and importance, Mrs. Post hired curator and scholar Marvin Chauncey Ross to institute a museum-quality recording system, publishing program and formalized conservation and acquisitions policies at Hillwood, which opened to the public in 1977.
Mansion: The Georgian-style Hillwood mansion, originally designed by John Diebert, features 36 rooms, including an entry hall, Russian porcelain room, French drawing room, icon room for the Fabergé pieces, pavilion, formal dining room, breakfast room, two libraries, several bedrooms and a Russian Liturgical Gallery. In 1955, Mrs. Post purchased Hillwood and hired architect Alexander McIlvaine to enlarge and redesign the mansion to provide a showcase for her extensive collection.
Gardens: Hillwood's gardens combine twelve acres of lawns and formal plantings with thirteen acres of native woodland beyond and include a circular rose garden; a formal French parterre outside the drawing room of the mansion; a large crescent-shaped lunar lawn; a traditional Japanese-style garden and waterfall representing a mountain landscape in miniature; and a greenhouse for orchids.
Restoration Consultant Team: Bowie+Gridley Architects
William C. Gridley, FAIA, Principal-in-Charge
Paul R. Lund, AIA, Project Manager
Jonathan Rodvien, AIA, Project Manager
Tom Zacharczyk, Construction Administrator
  Hefferan Partnership, Inc.
Steven Hefferan
  Oerlein & Associates Architects
Mary L. Oerlein
  Realco Project Management Services
Kenneth P. Aultice
Gary Baker
  Eileen Ritter & Associates
Eileen Ritter
  Staples and Charles, Ltd.
Barbara Fahs Charles
Robert Staples
  Richard Williams Architect
Richard Williams, AIA
Graphic Designer:

Polly Franchine

Museum Hours: January and March through December; closed February
Tuesdays to Saturdays 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and select evenings and Sundays. Hillwood is closed on all national holidays except Veteran’s Day.
Admission: Admission is by reservation only; Adults $10, seniors $8, students with valid ID and children 6-18 $5
Telephone/Fax: For reservations please call toll free 1/877-HILLWOOD, and 202/686-5807; or fax 202/966-7846; or email requests to reservations@hillwoodmuseum.org.
For general information please call 202/686-8500.
Website: www.hillwoodmuseum.org
Accreditation: 1997 by the American Association of Museums
Press Contacts: Jennifer A. Yeager
Hillwood Museum & Gardens
202-243-3918
jyeager@hillwoodmuseum.org