The Textile Museum expands public knowledge and appreciation – locally, nationally and internationally – of the artistic merits and cultural importance of the world’s textiles.

George Hewitt Myers 1875-1957
History

An exterior view of The Textile Museum
To learn more about the founder of The Textile Museum and the history of the institution, visit our online exhibition Ahead of His Time: The Collecting Vision of George Hewitt Myers.
Buildings The Textile Museum is housed in two historic buildings in the Kalorama neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Visitors enter the Museum through the former home of the Museum’s founding family which was designed by John Russell Pope in 1913. Since 1925, the Museum’s galleries have been located in an adjacent building purchased by George Hewitt Myers for this purpose. Large gardens behind the buildings are open to the public during Museum hours. For more information on visiting the Museum, click here.

The Textile Museum garden




