Rockwood Park & Museum
A ~74-acre Gothic Revival estate hiding in plain sight off I-95 — best for short, mansion-and-grounds combo visits.
The Quick Version
- • A Gothic Revival mansion (1851) on about 74 acres of grounds, gardens, and woodland trails just off I-95 in north Wilmington.
- • Mansion interior is small and stair-heavy — the grounds are the real draw for families with young kids.
- • Free to walk the park dawn to dusk. The mansion charges a tour fee and keeps shorter hours.
- • Plan 60–90 minutes for a grounds-only visit; add another 45 minutes if you do the mansion.
Best Ages
All ages (grounds); 7+ (mansion)
Plan For
60-90 minutes (grounds); 2 hours with mansion tour
Adults
Free (grounds); $10 self-guided mansion tour ($8 NCC residents)
Kids
Free (grounds); mansion tour fee applies
What to Expect
Rockwood was built in 1851 as a country home for Joseph Shipley, a Quaker merchant banker who'd made his money in Liverpool. The mansion is Gothic Revival — pointed arches, ornate woodwork, and a Conservatory wing that connects the house to the gardens. The estate stayed in family hands until New Castle County took it over in 1973, and it now operates as a museum and park with programming run by the nonprofit Rockwood Preservation Society.
For families with young kids, this is a grounds-first visit. The drive in is shaded and pretty. The lawn around the mansion is open and runnable. The Conservatory garden has heritage plantings that are nice to walk through. There's a short trail network through the woods on the property — half-mile loops, mostly flat, good for a stroller or a 3-year-old walker.
The mansion tour is the value-add for older kids — period rooms, the Conservatory, family history, and a real sense of how a wealthy 19th-century family lived. The self-guided first-floor option is the quick version. Full guided tours run 90 minutes — set that expectation if you're going with younger kids who'll fade.
Be honest about the accessibility caveat: only a limited portion of the mansion is wheelchair accessible. The main museum rooms are reached by stairs. The west wing and accessible restrooms are the workaround, but if anyone in your group can't manage stairs, the mansion interior won't be a full experience.
Who It's Best For
The grounds, gardens, and short trails are toddler-friendly — wide paths, open lawns, and lots of room to run. The mansion tour is more interesting for kids 7+ who can handle a 'no touching' walk through period rooms. Under 5, skip the mansion and focus on the gardens and Carriage House lawn.
Highlights
The Grounds & Gardens
All agesAbout 74 acres of lawn, formal gardens, heritage plantings, and woodland — a Certified Wildlife Habitat. Free, open dawn to dusk, and the right scale for a 60–90 minute family walk.
Mansion Tour
Ages 7+Gothic Revival rooms, the Conservatory, and family history. Self-guided first-floor visit is short; guided tours run 90 minutes (Fri/Sat at 10 AM, noon, 2 PM). Stairs throughout the main floors.
Ghost Tours (October)
Ages 10+Rockwood's popular seasonal ghost tour. Evening tours, ticketed, sells out — book early. Better for tweens and up; too intense for young kids.
Ice Cream Festival (Summer)
All agesLong-running Wilmington tradition on the Rockwood grounds — vendors, music, activities. 2026 festival is June 27, tickets $5. Check the New Castle County events page for current details.
What to Skip with Little Ones
- • The mansion interior with kids under 5 — stairs, narrow rooms, and 'don't touch' everything makes it stressful for everyone.
- • Ghost tours with kids under 10 — they're played for atmosphere, not for laughs.
- • Trying to make this a half-day. Rockwood is a 60–90 minute visit, not a destination day. Pair it with something else.
Logistics
Admission
Adults
Free (grounds); $10 self-guided mansion tour ($8 NCC residents)
Kids
Free (grounds); mansion tour fee applies
Under
Free
The park, gardens, and trails are free and open dawn to dusk. Self-guided first-floor mansion tour: $10 general, $8 NCC residents, $2 Art-Reach, free for Rockwood Preservation Society members and Delaware Libraries Museum Pass holders. Guided tours (90 min, Fri/Sat at 10 AM, noon, 2 PM) and special events (Ice Cream Festival, ghost tours, holiday tours) are ticketed separately — call (302) 761-4340 to confirm.
Membership tip: Rockwood Preservation Society membership supports the nonprofit that runs programming and gets you into member events.
Getting There
Parking
Free on-site parking near the Carriage House and mansion. Lot is small but usually has spots on weekdays. Fills up for ticketed events (Ice Cream Festival, ghost tours).
Entrance
Drive in off Washington Street Extension. The mansion and Carriage House sit at the top of the drive. Trail access is from the same lot.
Parent Logistics
Grounds are stroller-friendly — paved drives and packed gravel paths around the mansion and gardens. The wooded trails are dirt and can be uneven; a jogging stroller handles them but a carrier is easier. The mansion itself is NOT stroller-friendly inside — narrow doorways, tight rooms, and stairs between floors. Park the stroller in the entryway.
Public restrooms in the Carriage House and in the mansion's accessible west wing.
Limited. The Carriage House restrooms are your best bet — bring a portable changing pad as backup.
Mixed. Lots of mature trees along the drive and on the woodland trails. The formal gardens and open lawns near the mansion are sunny — bring hats in summer.
Food & Snacks
No food on-site. No on-site cafe. The Carriage House is used for events and rentals, not casual food service.
Snack strategy: Pack water, snacks, and a picnic if you want to make a morning of it. There are open lawns and benches around the grounds. For lunch afterward, head into north Wilmington or Talleyville (5–10 minutes) for kid-friendly options.
Pro Tips
- ✓ Self-guided first-floor tour is $10 ($8 NCC residents, free for RPPS members and DE Libraries Museum Pass holders). Guided tours are 90 min on Fri/Sat at 10/12/2. Call (302) 761-4340 for current schedule.
- ✓ The grounds alone are a legitimately good free outing — don't feel obligated to do the mansion to justify the trip.
- ✓ October ghost tours and the summer Ice Cream Festival sell out. Book or arrive early.
- ✓ Pair Rockwood with Bellevue State Park (5 minutes east) for a longer outing — Bellevue has a bigger trail network and a playground.
- ✓ If anyone in your group has mobility limits, set expectations: only the west wing of the mansion is accessible; the main rooms are stairs-only.
When to Go
Best Time to Visit
Weekday mornings or late afternoons. Spring and early summer when the Conservatory garden and grounds are at peak. Museum hours are limited (Thu–Sat 10 AM–4 PM, Sun 12–4 PM per NCC). Guided tours run 90 minutes on Fri/Sat at 10 AM, noon, and 2 PM; self-guided first-floor visits are shorter. Call ahead to confirm specific tour availability.
Seasonal Notes
Park is open dawn to dusk year-round. The mansion runs themed programming through the year: ghost tours in October (popular — sells out), holiday tours and decorated rooms in December, and the Ice Cream Festival in summer (a long-running Wilmington tradition; the 2026 festival is June 27, tickets $5). Specific event dates and prices shift year to year — check the New Castle County events page or Rockwood Preservation Society site before planning around a specific event.
Rainy Day?
Not great. The mansion is small and gets crowded fast in bad weather, and the grounds — the main draw — aren't fun in rain. Pick a different day.
While You're in the Area
Bellevue State Park is 5 minutes east — bigger trail network, a playground, and a tennis center. Brandywine Park and the Brandywine Zoo are 10 minutes south. Talleyville and north Wilmington have kid-friendly lunch options.
Upcoming Events
Verified against the venue’s official info.
Last reviewed May 20, 2026. Prices re-checked May 20, 2026. Confirm anything dated (admission, hours, special events) on the venue’s own site before you drive.
Sources: newcastlede.gov , rockwoodpreservation.org