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28 Homes Of Famous People You Can Actually Visit

28 Homes Of Famous People You Can Actually Visit

Buzz Feed17-07-2025
If you love history, one of the coolest things you can do is visit the ACTUAL homes of historically famous people and walk the very floors they did — it's the closest thing you get to time travel without a plutonium-packed DeLorean!
So, here are 28 of the most must-visit historical homes in the world (I've been lucky to visit a few of these, but hope to see them all before I'm pushing daisies):
Jane Austen
In Chawton, Hampshire, you can visit the 17th-century cottage where Jane Austen lived the last eight years of her life, writing the classic books Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Persuasion.
Inside, you can explore rooms — like Austen's bedroom seen below — which are filled with her personal artifacts.
You can even see her writing table! (Such a small table to write so many classics on.)
For more information, go here.
Prince
In Chanhassen, Minnesota — just outside Minneapolis — you can visit Paisley Park, the 65,000-square-foot complex where Prince lived and recorded music from 1987 through his death in 2016.
There's now a museum there dedicated to all things Prince, including rooms named for the movies/albums Under the Cherry Moon and Graffiti Bridge.
This room, meanwhile, looks 100% like what you imagine Prince's home would look like:
Learn more about visiting/how to get tickets here.
Frida Kahlo
In Coyoacán, a historic neighborhood in Mexico City, you can visit Frida Kahlo's Blue House (La Casa Azul). It's where she was born, painted many of her most famous works, and spent her final years.
Inside you'll find her corsets and prosthetics, personal diaries, and rooms she shared with her husband and collaborator Diego Rivera.
You can even see her artist's studio with her wheelchair still at the easel!
See more info here.
Abraham Lincoln
Before he was president, Abraham Lincoln was just a lawyer and dad living in a modest two-story house in Springfield, Illinois. That home — now a National Historic Site — is open to the public, and it's one of the most moving places you can visit as an American.
The home has been meticulously restored to look exactly as it did in the 1860s, complete with original furnishings, wallpaper, and floors that creak under your feet like they probably did under Lincoln's. The surrounding neighborhood has also been preserved, so you can even walk the same sidewalks Lincoln did!
Go here for more info.
Also, in Washington, DC, you can visit the back bedroom of the Petersen House, a boarding house across the street from Ford's Theatre, where President Abraham Lincoln died after being shot on April 14, 1865.
Some background: After John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln during a play, the wounded president was carried across the street to this modest red-brick townhouse. He was too gravely injured to be moved far, so they placed him in the back room — a simple, cramped space with just a small bed, a washstand, and chairs for those keeping vigil. Lincoln never regained consciousness. The room has been restored to how it looked that night, down to a replica of the exact bed Lincoln lay in (the original is at the Chicago History Museum).For more info, go here.
Joan of Arc
Above is Milla Jovovich in the movie The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc.
How's this for wild? You can visit the home of Joan of Arc in Domrémy-la-Pucelle, France. Joan of Arc was born in the four-room, stone house around 1412.
Here's what it looks like on the inside. (Also worth mentioning: Next to the house are interactive exhibits that delve into Joan's life and legacy.)
For info on visiting hours, ticket prices, and all that good stuff, go here.
Vincent van Gogh
In Arles, France, you can visit the hospital where van Gogh was treated after he infamously cut off his ear in 1888. He spent 53 weeks there, and its courtyard garden inspired many of the 100+ pieces he created onsite.
Check out the photo above — it looks like one of his paintings, huh?
Visitors can walk the gardens and then take a look at the room where van Gogh stayed — and painted.
For more information, visit here.
One more on van Gogh — in Cuesmes, Belgium, you can visit the house where van Gogh lived from August 1879 to October 1880, a pivotal period in his life as he transitioned from a preacher to an artist.
More info here.
French painter Claude Monet
Claude Monet's house in Giverny, France is a pastel-pink dream — a lot like his paintings — and where he spent the second half of his life painting obsessively, especially in the gardens he designed himself.
Here, my friends, are those gardens:
Inside, Monet's bright kitchen, cozy salon, and blue sitting room are all restored to his exact tastes.
For more info, go here.
Paul McCartney (the only living person on this list...long live, Paul!)
If you go to Liverpool, you're likely there because of the Beatles, and one of the coolest things you can do is visit John and Paul's childhood homes! Below is Paul's home at 20 Forthlin Road, where he lived from age 13 through becoming world-famous.
In the next two photos you can see Paul recently visiting his old home while filming Carpool Karaoke. This is the kitchen.
And here he's playing "When I'm Sixty-Four" in the very room that he wrote the song at age 16! I've been to this one, and on the tour they said Paul and John would often hunker down in this room and write songs like "She Loves You."
And yes, I played a chord on the piano, LOL. For more info, go here.
John Lennon
You can also visit the home John Lennon grew up in with his Aunt Mimi. Strawberry Fields (then a children's home run by the Salvation Army) is visible from the backyard, which is interesting to know, considering how it inspired him later.
This place was also a thrill to visit. Here's the living room as it looked when young John lived there.
And here is his bedroom, complete with posters of Brigitte Bardot (his teenage celebrity crush) and Elvis Presley.
You can even see the toilet where John undoubtedly bid adieu to some beans on toast, LOL.
For more info, go here.
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
In Memphis, Tennessee, you can visit Room 306 at the Lorraine Motel where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered on the balcony. It is now part of the National Civil Rights Museum, which was built in and around the motel.
The civil rights giant often stayed in Room 306 when he was in Memphis, and his trip in early April 1968 was no different. Following his assassination, his room was left untouched.
Find more info here.
William Shakespeare
In the market town of Stratford-upon-Avon, England, you can visit the very home that Shakespeare grew up in!
Shakespeare was born here in 1564 and spent much of his youth in this half-timbered house, which doubled as his father's glove-making workshop. The building has been carefully preserved with original 16th-century features intact.
Find more info here.
I've visited this one — here my wife and I are in the garden behind the home — and it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Just a few minutes away is the picturesque cottage that Anne Hathaway — Shakespeare's wife — grew up in.
The home is over 500 years old and features original furniture, cozy timbered rooms, and nine acres of blooming gardens. (We went here also, and it's a must-see, too!)
Find more info here.
Johnny Cash
You can visit Johnny Cash's boyhood home in Dyess, Arkansas. The Man in Black lived in the five-room farmhouse from age 3 until his high school graduation in 1950, and it has been restored to be like it was in the 1930s, complete with original furnishings and artifacts provided by the Cash family.
Here's some of the charming interior...I'm guessing Johnny plunked away on that piano a bit, huh?
For more info and tickets, visit here.
Mahatma Gandhi
In New Delhi, you can visit the 12-bedroom mansion where Mahatma Gandhi spent the last 144 days of his life and where his tragic assassination took place on Jan. 30, 1948. Today, it stands as both a memorial and a multimedia museum dedicated to Gandhi and his life.
Gandhi's bedroom has been preserved exactly as it was at the time of his assassination. In it you can see his walking stick, glasses, spinning wheel, sandals, utensils, a rough stone for washing, a simple mattress on the floor, and a low wooden desk.
More info here.
Rosa Parks
This one isn't a home, but it deserves a spot on this list. In Dearborn, Michigan, at the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, you can visit the actual Montgomery City Lines bus (#2857) where Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on Dec. 1, 1955, igniting the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The bus (seen below) has been restored meticulously to its 1955 condition.
What makes this experience unforgettable? Visitors can actually board the bus, walk the narrow aisle, and even sit in the very seat Rosa Parks occupied that day — just as President Obama is below.
Learn more here.
Paul Revere
If you're in Boston, you can visit the home of Paul Revere — you know, the guy whose midnight ride warned the British were coming! Located in Boston's historic North End, the Paul Revere House is the oldest remaining structure in downtown Boston (built around 1680).
I've been to this one and I have to say, I was impressed with how livable his place seemed for the 17th century. Like, look at this room below. Not so bad, right?
For more info, go here.
Elvis Presley
Located in Memphis, Tennessee, Graceland was Elvis Presley's mansion from 1957 until his death in 1977 — and it's exactly as over-the-top as you'd expect from the King. The "Jungle Room" alone (green shag carpet on the floor and ceiling) is worth the price of admission.
Visitors can see Elvis's private jets (yes, plural), a car museum packed with Cadillacs and Harley-Davidsons, and the Meditation Garden where he and several family members are buried.
For more info, go here.
Emperor Augustus
In Rome, you can visit the House of Augustus on Palatine Hill — the home of Rome's first emperor, Octavian (later Augustus), who lived here from around 30 BC until his death in AD 14. It was only opened to the public in 2014 after major excavation and conservation efforts.
Inside the restored rooms, you'll find some of the best-preserved frescoes from ancient Rome.
Amazing, huh?
Find more info here.
Charles Dickens
If you've ever wanted to literally step into a Victorian novel, you need to visit 48 Doughty Street, London. There you'll find the Charles Dickens Museum located in the the author's former home.
Dickens lived here in the early 1830s while writing Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby. You can see the actual desk where Dickens wrote some of his most iconic work, his handwritten letters, and even the couch where he died (seriously).
For visiting hours and all that good stuff, go here.
Sigmund Freud
How does it make you feel that you can visit the final home of Sigmund Freud? Located in Hampstead, England, Freud lived and worked there from 1938 until his death in 1939.
Inside you can see the iconic psychoanalytic couch on which he treated patients — beautifully preserved as the centerpiece of his study.
To learn more, go here.
Ernest Hemingway
In Key West, Florida, you can visit the Spanish Colonial‑style house where Hemingway lived and wrote during the 1930s.
The home was built in 1851, and dozens of six‑toed cats — descendants of Hemingway's beloved Snow White — roam the garden.
Classics written here include: For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Snows of Kilimanjaro, and To Have and Have Not.
More info here.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
In Salzburg, Austria, you can step inside Mozart's birthplace — a modest townhouse where the legendary composer was born on Jan. 27, 1756 and lived until age 17.
This three‑story museum features rooms filled with historical furnishings, portraits, handwritten letters, and even Mozart's childhood instruments — including a violin and clavichord that the prodigy played as a kid.
Bob Dylan
In Hibbing, Minnesota, you can visit the childhood home of Bob Dylan, where he grew up with the less star-friendly name of Robert Zimmerman. It's an unassuming two-story house on a quiet street, but for Dylan fans, it's a holy site.
Inside you can imagine yourself living back in the '50s and '60s, and see the living room where he practiced piano and his bedroom (below) where he played records.
Tours aren't available every day, so you definitely want to research before you go. For more info, go here.
Nelson Mandela
In Soweto, South Africa, you can visit the house where the anti-apartheid activist and former South African president Nelson Mandela lived from 1946 to 1962, before his arrest and decades-long imprisonment.
The home is now a national heritage site and museum, offering a powerful, personal look at the life of South Africa's most iconic freedom fighter.
For more info, go here.
Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy
If you've ever read War and Peace or Anna Karenina, you might want to visit Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy's estate and now a hauntingly preserved museum, located about 120 miles south of Moscow.
You'll see his writing desk (very cool), and be able to walk the grounds, which are peaceful, forested, and deeply connected to the Russian countryside he so often wrote about.
Go here for more info.
Ming and Qing Dynasties
Above is a portrait of the Hongwu Emperor (1328–1398), the founder of Ming dynasty.
Located in Beijing, this massive complex known as the Palace Museum (aka the Forbidden City) was home to 24 emperors from the Ming and Qing dynasties over nearly 500 years — including big names like Emperor Kangxi, the longest-reigning emperor in Chinese history, and Empress Dowager Cixi, who basically ruled China from behind the curtain for decades.
The complex spans over 180 acres and contains 980 surviving buildings — all ornately detailed. The Forbidden City was off-limits to the public for centuries (hence the name), but today it's one of the most visited museums in the world.
Learn more here.
George Frideric Handel and Jimi Hendrix
Let's end on something totally unexpected. In London, you can visit the Handel & Hendrix museum, which preserves the homes of baroque composer George Frideric Handel (who lived there from 1723–1759) and rock legend Jimi Hendrix (who lived there from 1968–1969), which rest side by side. Yes, Handel and Hendrix (separated by time) were next-door neighbors!
In Handel's flat you can walk through the restored rehearsal chamber, composition room, and dressing room/bedroom where Handel created Messiah and other iconic works. Original documents, manuscripts, period instruments, and decor faithful to the 18th-century setting add to the fun.
Next, you can see Hendrix's bedroom, featuring original furniture, a guitar, turntable, and treasure trove of personal items including posters and records.
Know any cool places like this people can visit? Let us know in the comments or in the anonymous form below and maybe we'll do a sequel post!
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While Emma Jung was celebrated during her life and in the nearly 70 years since her death as a key supporter of her husband, the record has largely been silent on her role beyond wife, mother and associate to Jung—that is, on her independent inquiries into her own psyche that she expressed through poetry, paintings, dream analysis, lectures, and other writings that established her as an intellectual force in her own right. And she isn't alone. Jung was surrounded by female followers, so much so that the women were given derogatory nicknames at the time—including Jungfrauen ('Jung's women') and 'Valkyries.' Some started as patients, some as students, but many became scholars, psychoanalysts, and Jungian acolytes. Some also became Jung's lovers. 'These women had come from all over the world,' writes Maggy Anthony, author and one-time student at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich, in Salome's Embrace: The Jungian Women. 'Once there, the charisma of Jung and his thought, which took the feminine seriously for the first time, induced them to want to share it with others through analysis and through their writing.' Many of these women have been celebrated along the way for their role as Jung's muses, collaborators, and disciples. But in the past two decades, several, including Sabina Spielrein and Toni Wolff, have begun to step out of the great psychoanalyst's shadow. With the publication in January of Dedicated to the Soul, Emma also now is joining the ranks of Jungian woman who are being recognized for their original work and their contributions to the field of psychology. 'I hope people start to see the individuality of each and every one of these women, and that we better understand their contributions,' says Fischer. As a trained historian, Fischer says he hopes Jungian scholarship moves 'away from the hagiographic tale of Carl Jung.' 'He didn't operate in a vacuum. And that goes for the women, but also for other men around him. His work is deeply rooted in these intellectual networks and exchanges.' Antonia Anna "Toni" Wolff (1888-1953) was a Swiss Jungian analyst and a close associate and sometime lover of psychiatrist Carl Jung. Photograph by Bridgeman Images Maiden and Mother Growing up in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, Emma Jung—née Rauschenbach—was an avid student who was denied an advanced education following the rules of propriety for women of her high-class station. Instead of going to college, she went to Paris on something of an independent study-finishing school year. After she returned home, she began exchanging letters with Jung in 1899. The exact details of how they first became acquainted remain unknown, but they did have some distant family ties (his uncle was an architect who built her family home; her mother babysit for young Carl on occasion as an act of charity for the struggling Jung family). Their courtship was filled with both romance and ideas. Jung encouraged Emma's intellectual curiosity and included lists of book recommendations in his letters. Once they were married, Emma eagerly assisted her new husband with his work. Jung was at the start of his career, working for what would become the famous mental institution, the Burghölzli. Emma was his translator, notetaker, test and case study subject when needed, and even assisted him with patients. Over the course of their marriage, the Jungian education Emma received led her to become an analyst herself, as well as the first elected president of the Psychology Club of Zurich. She also published two books: one on the legend of the Holy Grail, a subject of fascination since her youth, and a set of papers exploring Jung's ideas of animus and anima, or the masculine and feminine aspects of the psyche. Throughout the scholarship on and preservation work of Jung's legacy since his death in 1961, Emma has not been entirely overlooked. The description for the Foundation of the Works of C.G. Jung, the foundation established by his heirs in 2007, states that they are 'dedicated to the maintenance and development of the literary and creative heritage of Carl Gustav Jung and his wife, Emma Jung-Rauschenbach.' The mission of the Haus C.G. Jung, the family home on the banks of Lake Zurich in Küsnacht, Switzerland, which is a public museum and still occupied by family members, is to keep 'the memory alive of the physician and explorer of the human soul, Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961), and that of his wife and associate, Emma Jung-Rauschenbach.' All this—the work Emma had done in support or in tandem with her husband's ideas—the family knew about. But they didn't know what else she had been working on in private. (The ancient origins of astrology archetypes) That all changed when the family discovered a trove of her papers. According to Fischer, interest in Emma and the other women around Jung began to grow in the 1990s and early 2000s. Around that time, a French author named Imelda Gaudissart began research for a biography (eventually published in 2010) of Emma and approached the family about the rights to publish some of her papers. Ultimately, they declined. The reasons were two-fold: 'I felt it was our obligation to do her justice, and I wanted it to do myself,' Fischer explains. But also, they just didn't know what was in there. Family lore had it that Emma had destroyed a lot of her personal papers in the months before her death in 1955. Plus, the Jungs' children had other priorities. 'I think because in that first generation of descendants, they wanted to keep their mother private to them, they didn't even look into the material,' Fischer says. The keeper of the family archives had also been busy for years fielding requests concerning Carl Jung. 'Up until then, Emma Jung hadn't been that much in the focus, so I don't think he had too many reasons to check in more detail her papers.' Gaudissart's interest prompted Fischer to take a deeper look into the family archives. What he found was a treasure trove that would become Dedicated to the Soul, a book he co-edited and published earlier this year. Dedicated to the Soul is a collection of Emma's lectures, poetry, letters, and drawings that show the depth of Emma's private inquiry, the creativity and breadth of her thinking, and the strength of the analytical work she was doing on herself. Fischer describes the discovery as like finding pieces of Emma's mosaic 'to get a much better understanding of how she became who she was and who she was portrayed and remembered [as] at the end of her life.' 'We don't have to exaggerate; she doesn't necessarily have [Jung's] originality, but she's very curious. She works for years on her own psychological material and takes it to a very deep [place], and I think that that somehow got lost,' Fischer says. 'You could tell this woman made peace with her situation, namely in her married life. And you have to wonder how she did it. It can't have been easy.' Self and Shadow One of the chief difficulties in Emma's marriage was the other women—and her husband's wandering eye when it came to his female collaborators and followers. Sabina Spielrein was one of the first. Spielrein met Jung when she was committed to the Burghölzli at 19. Her upbringing had been difficult, characterized by emotional and possible sexual abuse. She reached her breaking point after the death of a beloved younger sister and eventually landed in the mental institution in Zurich where Jung was working and where she was diagnosed with hysteria. For decades, the story told about Spielrein embodied all the sensational stereotypes of the Jungfrauen. She was reduced to the femme fatale who fell in love with and seduced the genius young doctor on the verge of developing a revolutionary new field in psychology. The dramatized and ahistorical portrayal of her life in David Cronenberg's 2011 A Dangerous Method didn't help. The truth, of course, is much more complicated—and much more interesting. She was Jung's first affair, but not the last, and the exact nature of their relationship is not fully known. But at the Burghölzli, Spielrein turned her life around. Within three months, she was recovering, had applied to medical school, and was on her way to becoming 'one of the most innovative thinkers in psychology in the twentieth century,' according to an article in European Judaism by John Launer, the author of the first biography of Spielrein in English published in 2014. 'The erasure of her life story and intellectual achievements, and the invention in their place of an erotic walk-on part in Jung's life, is one of the more shocking examples of how women's histories have often been rewritten to diminish them,' Launer writes. Sabina Spielrein, who corresponded with both Jung and Freud and helped the latter develop the concept of the death instinct. Photograph by Eraza Collection / Alamy Stock Photo Throughout her career, as catalogued by Launer, Spielrein conducted the first study of schizophrenic speech (the subject of her dissertation); came up with early ideas that contributed to the development of the death instinct, an idea later fully formed and introduced by Freud (who gave her a glancing nod in a footnote); wrote a handful of innovative papers on family dynamics; radically combined several scientific fields of study in her work on child development; and began working on ideas that would eventually pop back up in the field of evolutionary psychology. Spielrein promoted her ideas through lectures and in her professional work, but there were several factors working against their having a lasting influence at that time, according to Klara Naszkowska, a gender, sexuality, and women's studies professor at Montclair State University and founding director of the International Association for Spielrein Studies. First, her groundbreaking perspective on combining ideas from different disciplines extended to combining ideas from different schools of thought. Spielrein had a complicated relationship with Jung and Freud—the former for the obvious reasons, the latter due to a three-way correspondence that developed between Jung, Freud, and Spielrein, 'which puts both men in a poor light as they had tried to silence her' about the affair, according to Launer. But that didn't stop her from also trying to draw on both their schools of thought in her work. Unfortunately, by that time, the intellectual schism between Jung and his one-time mentor Freud was firmly in place, and the camps maintained a scholarly separation. (What makes a genius? Science offers clues.) Second, Spielrein moved to Russia in 1923, far away from the hub of the psychoanalytic movement. 'She basically moves to Mars,' says Naszkowska. Then, during the Holocaust, she and family were murdered by the Nazis, and 'she completely disappears from the intellectual record for 35 years.' Naszkowska says the erasure of Spielrein started to change in the 1970s when a box of her papers was discovered during renovations at the Rousseau Institute in Geneva. People were initially interested in her because of her interactions with both Freud and Jung. While the first wave of attention focused on the affair, in the past few decades, more attention has been paid to Spielrein's own groundbreaking achievements. The International Association for Spielrein Studies was founded in 2017. According to Naszkowska, 'The main idea behind it was always to make the wrongs right with our work, to do her justice that wasn't done to her during her lifetime, but also after her death for many, many, many decades, so that her name is known and so that her ideas not only receive the recognition they deserve, but also they're used, incorporated in syllabi, and taught.' Toni Wolff may not have languished in quite the same decades-long obscurity, but her reputation and ideas have only begun to receive more serious attention since the publication of The Red Book in 2009, with her critical role in that period of Jung's life attracting more notice. Wolff met Jung six years after Spielrein, but under similar circumstances. She would become one of the most serious of Jung's affairs, both in the intense connection between the two and in how interwoven Wolff became in the lives of Jung and his family. Wolff arrived in Jung's world as a patient after a breakdown induced by the death of her father. Following the set pattern, she came for treatment and stayed as a Jungian convert after her recovery. According to Anthony, their professional relationship turned personal around the time that Jung was going through his seismic breakup with Freud and beginning the deep and difficult exploration of his own unconscious that would become The Red Book and set the foundation for his lifetime's work. It was this last event that would establish their close relationship. 'For it was to Toni that he turned as he began his descent into the dark, largely unexplored realms of the unconscious,' Anthony writes. 'In essence, she had to become his analyst.' Wolff would go on to become one of his primary assistants and his muse before becoming a professional analyst herself. While Wolff would work mostly within the Jungian model—unlike Spielrein, who also pursued inquiries outside of it—she was critical in developing a framework that addressed how Jung's idea of individuation specifically applied to women. She is best known for a paper she published in 1956 titled, 'Structural Forms of the Feminine Psyche.' When it comes to Jung's ideas, both Shamdasani and Fischer say that what the scholarship around the Jung women shows is that Jung was not on a solo intellectual journey. His work was collaborative, both in its nature and in the necessity for Jung to see that the ideas he was generating based on his own unconscious work were replicable in others. 'I think with every individual story that is being more profoundly researched, it becomes clear that [Jung] wasn't just a solitary genius working everything he ever wrote out from his inner self,' Fischer says. 'He operated in dialogue not only with his soul, but also with the people around him…I see much of it is an interplay, and it's sometimes hard to really pin it down to one person or the other as being the sole original originator of a concept or of an idea.' Emma Jung, Spielrein, and Wolff aren't the only three women whose collaborations and ideas touched Carl Jung and who deserve their own spotlight. Their stories show that the work unpacking the lives and intellectual worlds of the early women of psychoanalysis will only lead to a deeper, richer understanding of the intellectual history of the field As Emma wrote to her husband on February 5,1902: 'The world is full of the enigmatic and the mysterious, and people just live their lives without asking many questions…O who could know much, know all!'

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