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Special Events Volunteer

The Special Events Volunteer assists with events and programs such as Enchanted Summer Day, Truck and Tractor Day, Point-to-Point, lectures and concerts. The volunteer will report to the coordinator of the event, or the Volunteer Coordinator.

Qualifications:
Volunteers must be age 14 and up. All Winterthur volunteers over 18 years old must consent to a background check. Volunteers under 18 must have a permission waiver signed by a parent or guardian. (Form will be provided by Winterthur.)

Interested? Apply now!

If you are already a volunteer, log in online!

Legacy Giving

Create a legacy at Winterthur. Your support will help ensure that the museum, collections, garden, library, and education programs can inspire exploration of American culture and landscapes for generations to come. 

Legacy gifts support Winterthur’s future while helping you meet your estate-planning goals or provide you income during your lifetime. Though a gift from a will is the most common, legacy gifts can take many forms. 

For more information, please contact the Philanthropy Office at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org

Include Winterthur in Your Will 

Bequests are the most common type of planned gift and have been crucial to Winterthur since Winterthur’s founder Henry Francis du Pont. Whether you wish to provide critical general operating support or support a specific area or program, your gift creates a lasting legacy at Winterthur. 

If you have an existing will, you can ask your attorney to add Winterthur through a codicil. You may arrange for Winterthur to receive: 

  • A specific dollar amount. 
  • Specific assets, including securities, real estate, or other personal property. 
  • A residuary bequest–a portion of what remains after other beneficiaries are provided for.

Sample Language for General Purposes

I give $____ to The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Inc.(Tax ID # 51-0066038), a nonprofit organization located at 5105 Kennett Pike, Winterthur, DE 19735, for its general use and purpose.

Sample Language for Other Assets

I give to The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Inc.(Tax ID # 51-0066038), a nonprofit organization located at 5105 Kennett Pike, Winterthur, DE 19735, list specific property for its general use and purpose.

Sample Language for Residuary Bequest

I give to The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Inc.(Tax ID # 51-0066038), a nonprofit organization located at 5105 Kennett Pike, Winterthur, DE 19735, the remainder of my estate/ ____ % of the remainder of my estate for its general use and purpose.

Restricted Gifts 

As a museum, garden, library, and educational institution, Winterthur offers many opportunities for support. Your passion inspires which area of the institution, endowment fund, or program you designate for your support. Please contact the Planned Giving Office to discuss your intentions so we can honor your wishes. 

Other Types of Planned Gifts 

Name Winterthur as a Beneficiary 

A simple way to create a legacy is by designating Winterthur as a beneficiary on retirement plans, life insurance policies, or financial accounts. Some options have tax benefits. Contact us to learn more. 

Establish a Life Income Gift 

Some gifts can provide tax benefits and lifetime income for you or a loved one. Three forms of life income gifts are: 

  • Charitable Gift Annuity 
  • Charitable Remainder Trust 
  • Charitable Lead Trust 

If you are interested in establishing a life income gift, please contact us at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org for more information. 

Information for You and Your Advisor 

Please include the following information about Winterthur when planning a bequest or other planned gift: 

Legal Name: The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Inc. 

Address: 5105 Kennett Pike, Winterthur, DE 19735 

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org

Tax ID#: 51-0066038 

Port Royal Parlor

Port Royal Society 

Named for the first pieces of historic architecture Winterthur’s founder Henry Francis du Pont preserved, Port Royal Society recognizes supporters who have included Winterthur in their estate plans or have supported the organization through a planned gift. Through their commitments, these supporters play an essential role in ensuring Winterthur will be well cared for and appreciated for generations to come. In thanks for their generosity, members receive special access to Winterthur, invitations to special events, and recognition in donor publications. We also respect all requests to remain anonymous. 

If you have included Winterthur in your estate plans and would like to join Port Royal Society, please contact us at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org.


Outside In: Nature-inspired Design at Winterthur

Port Royal Entrace Hall

Collecting and Creating Beauty

Beginning in childhood, Henry Francis du Pont was a collector, gathering birds’ eggs, plants, and other natural objects in the gardens and woods of Winterthur and beyond. In later years, that same drive to gather and create beauty with objects was translated on a grand scale into his remarkable collections of decorative arts.

In partnership with the Delaware Museum of Natural History, the exhibition brings selections from their collection of natural specimens together with collections drawn from Winterthur’s museum and library holdings, demonstrating the powerful connection between nature and the decorative arts. 

Outside In considers how du Pont’s interiors looked to the outside and brought it inside in an aesthetic that has inspired designers ever since. The enduring theme of nature in design is captured through objects featuring naturalistic elements and, in some instances, objects such as shells and feathers found in nature. Organic objects such as ladles made from coconut shells and busks made from whale bone are included in the exhibition, inspiring visitors to consider current discussions about preservation and conservation of the natural world. This visually eclectic and immersive installation will capture the imagination of visitors of all ages with objects ranging from a hornet’s nest to shells, minerals, and fossils to exquisite inlaid cabinetry and shellwork grottos.  

Explore the Exhibition

Discounts for Members

We are pleased to offer Winterthur Members a variety of discounts from local retailers, museums, and gardens.

Brandywine Valley Explore and Save Program

Active members of qualifying local gardens and museums are welcome to use their Brandywine Valley Explore and Save discount for $2 off a Winterthur adult general admission ticket. Cannot be combined with other admission discounts or offers. At this time, there are no blackout dates at Winterthur for the Explore or Save discount. Winterthur Members also receive this discount at qualifying gardens and museums. The full list of participating gardens and museums can be found here along with restrictions per location.

Retail Discounts

The Winterthur Retail Partners Program offers Winterthur Members discounts at a local retailers. Please continue to check this page for new partner additions. Exclusions apply. Winterthur Members must present their membership card in order to receive discount.

Gateway Gardens in Hockessin Delaware offers discounts to Winterthur members.

Gateway Garden Center
Discount: 10% off all non-sale plants
Website: gatewaygardens.com
Address: 7277 Lancaster Pike, Hockessin, DE 19707


Swigg Real Wine, Craft Beer & Spirits offers Winterthur members discounts.

Swigg Real Wine, Craft Beer, & Spirits
Discount: 10% off all wine.
Website: swiggwine.com
Address: Independence Mall, 1601 Concord Pike,Wilmington, DE 19803

Fifty Years of Remarkable Science

Did you know that Winterthur might have saved Lady Liberty from ruin? That it might have prevented the Liberty Bell from cracking again?  Over the past 50 years, Winterthur’s scientists have answered the call to protect some of our country’s most famous icons, and they have contributed in important ways to the body of knowledge about American craft. From understanding the finer points of fraktur to identifying infamous fakes and forgeries, our Scientific Research and Analysis Laboratory (SRAL) has worked on the cutting edge of conservation science.  

One of only 18 museum science labs in the country, the Winterthur  SRAL houses 12 pieces of state-of-the-art analytical instrumentation that can analyze materials on a molecular or elemental level. When the SRAL opened in 1969, however, it housed only one unique instrument: an X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometer, built by Winterthur scientist Vic Hansen, that was large enough to accommodate whole objects. Because other XRF instruments of the day could analyze only small samples of material,  institutions across the country began seeking Winterthur’s help to examine their precious objects, which established the SRAL as a leader in the field.   

Celebrating 70 years as a major cultural institution in 2021, Winterthur also celebrated 50 years of remarkable science. 

Preventing Another Crack in the Liberty Bell? 


 For the United States’ Bicentennial in 1975, the Liberty Bell was to be moved from the tower of Independence Hall to a new location in Philadelphia. Those responsible for moving the famously cracked icon needed help in anticipating risks of a move, so they called on the expertise and technology of the SRAL.  

The Liberty Bell we know as the symbol of American Independence is the third casting of a bell originally made by the Whitechapel Foundry of London. On its first ring in Philadelphia, the Whitechapel bell cracked. It was then recast twice by local workmen,  John Stowe and John Pass, in attempts to improve its strength and tone. The current crack is thought to have occurred in the early 19th century.   

A special portable instrument was adapted from the SRAL. Taken to Philadelphia, it was held close to the rim of the bell in 10 different locations to collect data. The data showed a wide variation in the composition of metal around the rim, as well as an unsuitable tin content, which resulted in a brittle alloy that cracked easily.  

The study concluded that the bell was stable and thus could be moved safely to Independence National Historic Park, where it stands today.   

Saving the Statue of Liberty

Having heard about Winterthur’s work with the Liberty Bell, in May 1980 the National Park Service  asked for the SRAL’s help in finding the culprit behind severe corrosion in another American icon, the Statue of Liberty. It was predicted that this corrosion could cause “catastrophic destruction.”   

To get an accurate reading, Winterthur scientist Vic Hansen, founder of the SRAL, carefully scraped corrosion products from the statue’s surface to isolate the corrosion from the structural copper of the statue. Hansen found that the only thing “out of the ordinary” was the high level of lead and mercury on the surface, which indicated a high level of air pollution around the statue. Lead likely would have originated from car exhaust around New York City. Mercury could have been deposited from local heavy industries.  

While Hansen’s results made it possible to suggest the best materials for rivets and bolts to repair the statue, it was hoped that the results would also raise awareness in the National Park Service about the dangers of air pollution to our metallic cultural heritage.   

Fakes and Forgeries: The Lenssen Collection

Connoisseurship, provenance, and scientific analysis are all key in determining whether an object is a fake. From 1981 to 1984, Winterthur scientists analyzed more than 1,000 pieces of silver in the Lenssen Collection 9now part of the Winterthur collection) to document the alloys. They were surprised to find that only 23 percent of the collection was genuine.   

How did they do it? Before the mid-19th century, silver was refined by a process known as cupellation: silver ore was heated to 1,100°C to separate raw silver from lead compounds in the ore. The crude process left traces of lead and gold in the silver alloy. Beginning in the second half of the 19th century, silver was refined electrolytically, leaving fewer impurities. Using XRF, Winterthur scientists determined the percentage of impurities in each, thus elucidating which was what it purported to be—and which was not.   Using XRF, Winterthur scientists determined the percentage of impurities in each, thus clarifying which were fakes and which were genuine.  

Fakes and Forgeries: A Meissen Soup Tureen

Scientific analysis of an object is just one of many factors in determining the authenticity of a work of art. In the case of a Meissen tureen, it proved to be the crucial factor.   

The connoisseurship and provenance of the tureen were considered secure. Scholars generally agreed the floral decoration was painted in the style of one of Meissen’s great artists, and information about the tureen, identified by a date of 1738, was published many times.  

Analysis of the colorants told a different story. A yellow flower on the tureen contained zinc, the green grass contained chromium, and the gilding contained bismuth. None of those elements would be found on a ceramic made before 1800.   

Non-glazed, blank ceramic bodies were often kept in storage by Meissen, so someone in the 19th century might have copied an 18th-century design using a blank Meissen body. Things aren’t always as they seem. 

Fifty Years of Fraktur

Over the decades, much of the fraktur in the Winterthur collection has been analyzed to identify the colorants and materials. The analyses help us understand the original appearance of some fraktur that has discolored and to refute the notion that artists made their own paints from locally available materials. Such valuable information provides a better understanding of preservation needs and artists’ creation of these objects.  

Copper in the brown leaf designs of this fraktur suggests the use of a copper-based green pigment, most likely verdigris, which has degraded and discolored to brown from exposure to light and air over time. Instrumental analysis of the red colorant indicates a mixture of vermilion (HgS) and red lead (Pb3O4). Paint manufacturers often blended vermilion, a relatively expensive pigment, with less expensive red lead in order to increase profits.  

The yellow colorant from the flower petal was shown to be a mixture of gamboge, a colorant, and gum Arabic, the binding medium. Gamboge comes from the Garcinia tree of India and Southeast Asia. Gum Arabic originates from a species of Acacia tree found mainly in the subtropics. The presence of gamboge and gum Arabic indicates the artist had access to imported paint pigments and media. 

Made in China: A Scientific Study of Chinese Export Lacquer

Beginning in 2014, with grant funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Winterthur conservators turned their attention to the treatment of its Chinese export lacquer objects, while SRAL scientists completed the analytical work necessary to better understand this under-researched form of material culture. To broaden the scope of the project, Winterthur collaborated with the Peabody Essex Museum and the Philadelphia Museum of Art to analyze 22 comparable objects from the three collections.  

Analysis of the lacquer layers indicates they are composed mainly of a drying oil with urushi and laccol lacquer from the tree species Rhus vernicifluum and Rhus succedanea, respectively. The binding medium of the ground layers indicates they are composed of blood, a proteinous binder such as animal glue, and a drying oil.  

Understanding the methods of manufacture and materials used through the instrumental analysis conducted at SRAL has informed more effective and longer-lasting treatments for these objects. The research also informs the techniques and materials used by 18- and 19th-century Chinese craftsmen to hasten manufacturing so they could meet the demands of the Western market.  

Fifty Years On…

Collaboration is just as important now as it was 50 years ago. Winterthur scientists  Catherine Matsen and  Dr.  Rosie Grayburn work continuously with conservation scientists around the world to advance the scientific study of material culture. Among the SRAL’s most important contributions is its role as a center for teaching scientific methods to conservators in the Winterthur University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation, who go on to spread its expertise around the world. 

Which scientific project sparked your imagination most? We would love to hear from you.  

For more science and conservation stories, follow @winterthurconservation on Instagram.

This article was originally published in 2019.

Gifts in Memory

Honor a loved one through a gift to Winterthur.

Your thoughtful donation in memory of a friend or family member helps Winterthur reach our vision to inspire exploration of American culture and landscapes through compelling stories and experiences. We will notify the honoree’s family of your generous contribution in their memory, without reference to the donation amount.

You can also sponsor a new bench or tree in the Winterthur Garden in memory of a loved one. Contact us at contributions@winterthur.org or 302.888.4673 to learn more about the garden tribute program. 
 
Gifts in memory will be recognized in the Honor Roll of Donors. 

“My mother passed [recently], and some of her most precious memories were those times she spent at Winterthur with her children and grandchildren. In lieu of flowers, we recommended friends make donations to Winterthur. Just wanted to thank you for creating a magical environment that brought such joy and memories to our family, and hopefully will continue to do so for years to come.” ~ Lisa 
 
Please fill out the Honor or Tribute Information section of this page

Corporate Partnerships

By sponsoring a program, event or exhibition, becoming a corporate member, or entertaining with us, your company provides critical support for our mission to inspire and educate through the collections, estate, and academic programs. 

Sponsorship Opportunities 

As one of Delaware’s largest cultural institutions and a premier destination for experiencing art and landscapes, Winterthur is a great partner. Corporate sponsorship helps you to engage our visitors, entertain employees, and spread brand recognition across the region. Each sponsorship package is customized to meet your company’s goals. 

Opportunities range from supporting museum, garden, or library projects to sponsoring events, programs, exhibitions, and more. Please contact the Philanthropy Office at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org for more information about current opportunities. 

Winterthur Business Associates Membership 

Join the Winterthur Business Associates to enjoy exclusive benefits for your company, including: 

  • Access to Winterthur for hosting meetings, seminars, conferences, lectures, and special events. 
  • General admission passes to share with employees and clients. 
  • Discounts onsite. 
  • Invitations to Winterthur’s special events, including the Delaware Antiques Show and Point-to-Point steeplechase races
  • Recognition in Winterthur’s Honor Roll of Donors. 

We are happy to work with you to develop additional benefits that meet your goals, including free admission for employees, curator-led tours, volunteer opportunities, and more. For more information, please contact the Philanthropy Office at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org

Entertaining at Winterthur 

Winterthur is truly a wonderful place to entertain. From a small meeting in the Hawkes Center to a large gala in the Galleries Reception Atrium, our wide range of venue options can meet any event needs. Our expert staff will work with you to customize the experience and make your event a success. 

Signature Winterthur events such as the annual Delaware Antiques Show and Point-to-Point steeplechase race provide a variety of opportunities for entertaining employees and clients. Please contact the Philanthropy Office for more information at 302.888.4673 or contributions@winterthur.org

Du Pont the Designer

One need only look at the Port Royal Parlor at Winterthur to see what made Henry Francis du Pont a great designer. 

There is the prominence of color in the rich yellow draperies, sofas, and chairs, a vivid counterpoint to the jewel tones of the rug on which the furniture rests. There is the symmetry of the sofas, facing each other before the fireplace, as well as the side tables flanking the mantel, the high chests in conversation from their respective sides of the room, the chairs next to the chests, and the desk-and-bookcase centered between doorways. Among all this order, note the flowers. Even that touch is as carefully selected, beautifully arranged, and precisely placed as every other element of the room. 

It is design of a type that is now so established, we barely give it a thought. But in H. F. du Pont’s time and social milieu, it was a new approach. He departed from what most designers of the day were doing and used American antiques as high style.

Understanding du Pont the designer begins with examining du Pont the collector, the focus of the exhibition Outside In: Nature-inspired Design at Winterthur. In his youth, du Pont collected things he found in nature, such as birds’ eggs and seashells. As an adult, his fascination evolved into a passion for historic American furniture and decorative arts—unlike most members of high society, who preferred to collect the arts and objects of Europe. His collection became a means to an end: the creation of beautiful spaces. 

Du Pont collected items that were the highest quality of craftsmanship. He did not feel obligated to fill the many rooms of his home with furniture from the same period, place, or style, as a true antiquarian would feel compelled to do. He wasn’t trying to exactly re-create a Philadelphia room in 1780, for example. Rather, he used his collection as an artistic medium. He often placed items from different periods among sympathetic backdrops, using them to create a particular space.

He also incorporated different colors through the year, changing window treatments and slipcovers to harmonize with the light of the day and the changing seasons, as seen in his beloved garden outside the windows. It was second-order thinking that ensured every room looked stunning at every time of the year. Du Pont was truly remarkable—shape, color, textures, light—he thought through all that and put it all together. 

He was highly influenced by friends and peers such as Electra Havemeyer Webb at Shelburne, in Vermont, and Henry Davis Sleeper, an interior decorator who turned his home into a showcase and helped du Pont design Chestertown House in Southampton, New York. Like his friend Dr. Albert Barnes, who assembled a world-class collection of Post-Impressionist, Expressionist, and folk art for his galleries in Merion, du Pont created settings that were not focused on a single object but on whole compositions. He also relied heavily on his friend Bertha Benkard, an authority on early 19th-century furniture who helped him select and buy pieces for his collection. He described her “faultless taste” as the reason he turned to her for advice on color and arrangement. 

Yet du Pont’s aesthetic also differed from many of his friends’ preferences. Though he valued their opinions and sought their approval, he trusted his own intuition. The result was twofold: the creation of beautiful rooms and the legitimization of American objects as worthy of the treatment and esteem given contemporaneous objects from England and France. The vision that began at Chestertown House was fully realized at Winterthur. 

H. F. du Pont was a trendsetter in his day. He influenced others to use American pieces in fashionable settings, blending traditional objects with a modern eye for color and display. He gave this design approach his stamp of approval, cementing it as being in good taste.