Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens

Museum · Hough

Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens

Museum · Hough

1

6709 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH 44103

Photos

Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by Edsel_ (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by Fae (Public Domain)
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by stu_spivak (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by stu_spivak (CC-SA 2.0)
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null
Dunham Tavern Museum & Gardens by null

Highlights

The Dunham Tavern, Cleveland's oldest standing structure, offers fascinating tours of its rich history and charming grounds, making it a must-visit gem.  

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6709 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH 44103 Get directions

dunhamtavern.org

Information

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6709 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH 44103 Get directions

+1 216 431 1060
dunhamtavern.org
𝕏
@dunhamtavernmus

Features

restroom
wheelchair accessible parking lot
wheelchair accessible entrance
wheelchair accessible restroom
crowd family friendly

Last updated

Mar 4, 2025

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@atlasobscura

"This house was built in 1824, when Cleveland was still a frontier outpost named Cleaveland. (The spelling changed around 1831 when the local paper was unable to fit the extra “A” on the masthead.) In its early days, the clapboard Dunham Tavern was the private home of Rufus and Jane Pratt, who moved from Massachusetts to settle on what was then frontierland. However, the completion of the Ohio and Erie Canal in 1832 quickly transformed this sleepy outpost into a key stop between the Ohio River and the Great Lakes. By the 1840s, the Dunhams saw fit to take up innkeeping in addition to farming. The Dunhams added a taproom and built a separate structure to house overnight guests, in addition to a 15-horse stable. The new tavern quickly became a local hotspot. The Whig Party held meetings here, gamesmen gathered for turkey shoots, and passing travelers shared tales of life on the road. In 1857, the tavern again became a single-family home, which it remained until the 1930s, when it became studio space for Works Progress Administration (WPA) artists and printmakers. Although less-known than other aspects of the New Deal, the WPA Federal Art Project had a significant footprint in Cleveland and in other metropolitan areas around the country. It provided employment for artists during the Great Depression, with most of the participants in the Cleveland area making posters to promote parks, new housing developments, and other New Deal public works. Now one of the very few buildings left from the early days of Cleveland, the Dunham Tavern has operated as a museum since 1941. It has been filled with period antiques and the grounds have been transformed into gardens." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

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Izzie Comis

Google
I received a tour this afternoon by Duncan who was extremely knowledgeable and generous to take over an hour to give me a tour of the place and answer all my questions. He was an expert on the house and has clearly put a lot of work into curating the museum. I really enjoyed learning about many objects and the home’s history-there are so many cool things to learn and artifacts to see over a 200-year history. The grounds are beautiful in the middle of a busting midtown neighborhood. I was told a tornado did some damage to the gutters/soffit that will soon be repaired!

Emily S.

Google
How did I not know about this museum before?! We received an excellent tour from Duncan, who was clearly passionate and knowledgeable. We learned a lot about Cleveland’s history, and what it was like to run a tavern back in the day. This really is a gem and I hope more people find out about it!

Syd Crawford

Google
Very cool old house! Had a fun card display.

penny adelstein

Google
I did not attend the museum; but instead, an evening weekend concert at the beautiful, huge separate Dunham Tavern Museum BARN bldg. on the property. It was the perfect venue (sight, sound, lighting) for the intimate concert season opener by LES DELICES, Cleveland's own classical Baroque ensemble. As I sat there listening, I imagined what a special, unique & perfect venue it must be for other type private functions, including weddings, family & class reunions, corporate events, etc.. I will surely be spreading the word to others.

Jordan Robinson

Google
My partner and I visited last Sunday and we didn’t know what to expect. Janice was our tour guide and gave us a very interesting tour. I highly recommend visiting.

Peter Hedman

Google
Dunham Tavern is the "oldest building in Cleveland in that is at it's original location". The museum today is a collection of period artifacts that give you a sense of what daily life for 1836 tavern-keepers might have been like. See wooden boot-pullers, pewter dishware (contains lead!), tin coffee roasting machines, lead-lined tea boxes, rough kitchen tables, a wooden bar in the taproom, a musket and the wall, and (my favorite part) maps and engravings of the Cleveland-of-the-past. There are only three things in the museum that were owned by the Dunhams themselves (needlepoints made by their daughters and a dresser) and several period artifacts that were not likely used by the Dunhams (flax spinning equipment). My tour guide made all of the old things come alive! This building has stood by as Cleveland moved through many eras --- it is an interesting vantage point from which to think about Cleveland and American history. Dunham Tavern is worth a visit if you can stop by during one of its elusive open times. At other times you can explore the gardens or stop by the farm stand to buy food grown on the grounds.

B Logistics

Google
The barn in the back is a hidden wedding venue treasure and it's located just outside of downtown Cleveland. Absolutely stunning inside, has outdoor space avaialble that can be tented.

Mycelium

Google
Wonderful old house and tavern with numerous old tools, as well as many other old things. The tour is very nice, informative, and professional. I recommend this place to anyone, whether they like history or not.

Bethany B.

Yelp
Did you know that the oldest existing building in Ohio is not only in your home town - but hiding in plain sight in Midtown on Euclid Avenue? If you don't know, you had better ask somebody. As in, the amiable team of volunteers and live-in caretaker who maintain this historic gem and its picturesque gardens. I first came to know of the Dunhan Tavern when my then-fiance and I were on the hunt for an intimate, low-key wedding locale, my father - the all-time Cleveland denizen - suggested it to me. After jumping through hoops with other, more conventional wedding venues, we visited the Dunham Tavern and the process of booking our wedding was as simple as placing a nominal deposit and picking any one of dozens of available days. That was it. If you love local history, beautiful gardens, and low-key party venues, give the Dunham Tavern a look. I think that you will be pleased and surprised!

Jenn G.

Yelp
Never knew this adorable place was here until In came to shoot a wedding. Great venue with easy to access facilities for all. Very pretty gardens.

L K.

Yelp
My family and I were in route to an art museum across town and happened to drive by the Dunham Museum. Having recently moved from Ohio to Connecticut, the beautifully preserved 1800's colonial caught our eye and we immediately made a u-turn for the Dunham parking lot and skipped the museum! That turned out to be the best move we made the whole weekend. The volunteer docent/tour guide gave us a lengthy, well-informed tour of one of Cleveland's most magnificent landmarks and historical sites. I only wish we had visited this gem in the summer to be able to view its beautiful gardens. We've toured many, many old and historic homes, and live in one ourselves - we were so pleased to see this house and tavern so well preserved by the historical society. Highly recommend for a lovely stop.