Hill-Stead Museum. The Hill-Stead Museum is a Colonial Revival house and art museum set on a large estate at 35 Mountain Road in Farmington, Connecticut.
   It is best known for its French Impressionist masterpieces, architecture, and stately grounds. The property was designated a National Historic Landmark as a nationally significant example of Colonial Revival architecture, built in 1901 to designs that were the result of a unique collaboration between Theodate Pope Riddle, one of the United States' first female architects, and the renowned firm of McKim, Mead & White.
   The house was built for Riddle's father, Alfred Atmore Pope, and the art collection it houses was collected by Pope and Riddle. Hill-Stead was created on 250 acres as a country estate for wealthy industrialist Alfred Atmore Pope, to the designs of his daughter Theodate Pope Riddle.
   Egerton Swartwout of the renowned architectural firm McKim, Mead, and White translated her design into a working site plan, and construction took place over the period of 1898 to 1901. Theodate inherited the house after her parents deaths, and prior to her own passing in 1946 willed Hill-Stead Museum as a memorial to her parents and for the benefit and enjoyment of the public.
   She directed that both the house and its contents remain intact, not to be moved, lent, or sold. Hill-Stead comprises 152 acres, the balance having been sold off during the first ye
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