Somewhere between the food, conversations, joints, smiles, laughter, and the atmosphere of the house itself, the night transformed into one of those experiences that remind you what the cannabis community is really all about: support. Danette later described the night as “the community rallying behind one of its own and celebrating a milestone,” and honestly, I don’t think she could have said it any better. By the end of the night, neither Jeremy nor I could have imagined a more perfect bookend to an exhausting but deeply meaningful and productive week.
Rebecca Finn House: A Historic Home Unlike Anything Else in Cannabis
When we first pulled up to the Rebecca Finn House, we thought we were arriving at a cool overnight stop and a cannabis-friendly event space, but we couldn’t have been more wrong. The second we stepped onto the property, both of us realized this place was operating on a completely different frequency than most of the cannabis industry. This was a real historical property with that warm-hug energy holding up the walls. The kind of place that slows your breathing down the second you walk inside.

What Danette has built here feels less like a venue and more like a firmly rooted, living piece of the town itself. The Rebecca Finn House was once the centerfold in our
Destination Edition back in early 2025, the photos genuinely do not do this place justice.
Built in 1868, this house is not the only historic home in the U.S. that has become cannabis-friendly, but it is one of the most unique and culturally significant cannabis-friendly historic homes in the country because of how fully the property has embraced cannabis hospitality, wellness, events, and community inside an actual historic residential landmark.
What makes the Rebecca Finn House stand out is that it’s not a lounge, an Airbnb, or your average event space that “allows cannabis.” Jeremy described it as “the perfect balance between history, hospitality, and community and a place where people can genuinely connect, unwind, and feel at home”.
It functions much more like a preserved historic estate that has been reimagined as a cannabis-friendly cultural and event destination. That combination is still extremely rare. There are no doubt historic mansions used for private cannabis events, cannabis-friendly bed-and-breakfasts, renovated old homes repurposed into lounges or hospitality spaces, and historic commercial buildings converted into cannabis clubs, but there doesn’t seem to be anything quite like the Rebecca Finn House.
That’s actually one of the fascinating things about this: states like California, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington legalized cannabis earlier, but strict zoning laws, hospitality regulations, smoking restrictions, federal banking and insurance problems, and historic preservation rules have made it very difficult to openly operate cannabis event spaces inside landmark homes.
That means the Rebecca Finn House sits in this beautiful intersection of historic preservation and cannabis normalization through wellness and hospitality. There may not be another place in the world doing all of this at the same time while also being a true historic landmark.
A Cannabis Space That Doesn’t Feel Forced
Danette didn’t buy some trendy property and awkwardly force cannabis onto it because she was told it would be profitable. She rescued a piece of history and somehow preserved everything that made it special while still creating a place where people can gather, consume, celebrate, heal, and feel comfortable being themselves. The floors creak, the architecture has weight and elegance from the trim work to the windows, lighting, and flow of the rooms, and it all somehow feels both traditional and elevated perfectly for cannabis events without losing its warmth. That’s incredibly hard to pull off, but somehow Danette figured it out.
There’s something powerful about sitting inside a historic home passing joints while surrounded by history and community, instead of being shoved outside behind barricades or hidden away in some isolated smoking section. The grounds themselves are beautifully maintained without feeling overly manicured or artificial. Everything reflects care, intention, and pride. You can tell Danette genuinely gives a damn about every inch of the property and every person who walks through the doors.