Craftsmanship at Glencairn:
Five Artists Tour


Available on weekends at 1:45 pm beginning Saturday, May 11, 2024.

$15 adults
$12 for seniors (65+) and students (5+)
Free for members and children 4 and under
Visit our Special Rates page for discounted ticket options.

Around every corner in Glencairn, visitors encounter stunning examples of early 20th-century craftsmanship—in metal, stained glass, mosaic, stone, and wood. Craftsmanship at Glencairn: Five Artists is a guided tour and exhibit that explores the work of five artists who worked at Glencairn, the castle-like home built by Raymond Pitcairn for his family (completed in 1939). Well over one hundred artists, architects, and laborers contributed to its construction and decoration, which took more than a decade to complete. Without the efforts of all of them working together, the Pitcairns’ remarkable home could not have become a reality. 

Pitcairn had previously established a variety of workshops adjacent to the building site of Bryn Athyn Cathedral (dedicated 1919), including an architectural studio, a modeling shop, a metal shop, a stained-glass studio and glassworks, a stone shop, and a wood shop. These same shops—and many of the same artists—were also used to create artwork for Glencairn. This guided tour, which will explore the Great Hall and Upper Hall on the first floor, the main bedroom on the third floor, the Chapel on the fifth floor, and the observation deck at the top of the tower, will introduce visitors to works by Parke E. Edwards (metalwork), Winfred S. Hyatt (stained glass), Robert G. Glenn (mosaic), Benjamin A. Tweedale (stone carving), and Frank Jeck (woodcarving).

Read more about the Craftsmanship at Glencairn: Five Artists guided tour and exhibit in Glencairn Museum News

For larger or private groups or tours by appointment, contact Leah.Smith@GlencairnMuseum.org to make arrangements.

Metalworker Parke Emerson Edwards (second from left) and a large crew (including Vera Pitcairn, youngest daughter of Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn, and her cousin Nina Hyatt) pose with a large Monel metal railing. The photo was taken in the late 1930s or early 1940s, just before the railing was installed on the observation deck of Glencairn's tower. 

Metalworker Parke Emerson Edwards (second from left) and a large crew (including Vera Pitcairn, youngest daughter of Raymond and Mildred Pitcairn, and her cousin Nina Hyatt) pose with a large Monel metal railing. The photo was taken in the late 1930s or early 1940s, just before the railing was installed on the observation deck of Glencairn's tower.