Grand Teton: T.A. Moulton Barn
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T.A. Moulton Barn, Grand Teton National Park

Where the open sage flats of Antelope Flats meet the abrupt rise of the Teton Range, a century old homestead barn holds its place in one of the most recognized views in the national park system.

At a glance
  • The barn sits along Mormon Row Historic District, accessible via Antelope Flats Road just east of Moose Junction off Highway 26/89
  • Arrive at sunrise for the most dramatic light on the Teton Range as it catches the peaks above the barn
  • Summer brings wildflowers and bison grazing nearby while winter offers snow covered rooftops and far fewer visitors
  • Walk the full Mormon Row loop to see additional homestead structures and get a sense of the broader settlement history
  • No fee or permit is required to visit, but parking is limited so arriving early or late in the day helps you avoid the midday crowds

Few photographs capture the American West quite like the view from Mormon Row looking toward the Teton Range with the T.A. Moulton Barn in the foreground. The barn itself is a weathered wood structure built in the early 1900s by homesteader Thomas Alma Moulton, and it remains one of the most photographed subjects in the entire national park system. What makes this spot so compelling is not just the barn but the relationship between the human scale of the building and the sheer vertical rise of the Teton Range behind it.

Standing here on a clear morning, the peaks catch the first light well before the valley floor warms up. The sagebrush flats stretch out in muted silver green tones, and bison often graze within close range of the road, moving slowly through the grass. In summer, patches of yellow and purple wildflowers push up through the dry soil around the historic structures. In winter, the roofline of the barn carries a thick cap of snow while the surrounding landscape goes quiet and pale.

The air at this elevation carries the smell of sage, especially after rain. The sounds here are mostly wind and birds, with the occasional bison moving through the brush. The Tetons rise abruptly from the valley with no foothills to soften the transition, so the barn sits in this open flat space with nearly 7,000 feet of vertical relief visible directly to the west. It is a rare place where geology, history, and wildlife overlap in a single field of view.

The Visit

Getting there

T.A. Moulton Barn sits along Mormon Row Historic District in Grand Teton National Park. From Moose Junction on Highway 26/89, turn east onto Antelope Flats Road and drive about 1.5 miles. The barn appears on your left with the Teton Range rising directly behind it. A small gravel pullout provides parking, though it fills quickly during peak season.

When to visit

Sunrise is the move here. The Teton peaks catch alpenglow while the barn and surrounding flats stay in cooler shadow creating a natural contrast that holds for roughly 20 to 30 minutes after first light. Summer mornings in June and July also bring wildflowers across the sage flats which adds foreground color to the scene. Winter visits reward the patient traveler with snow loaded rooftops and a quieter road with far thinner crowds.

What to look for

Keep an eye on the barn's original weathered siding and the way the roof lines angle toward the peaks. Bison frequently graze the open flats between the barn and the road particularly in early morning and around dusk so give them plenty of space. Further along the row, additional homestead structures from the early 1900s settlement era are worth a slow walk and offer a broader sense of how families worked this land against a demanding climate.

Grand Teton: T.A. Moulton Barn
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Grand Teton: T.A. Moulton Barn

Earned the hard way

Insider Tips

01

Walk the fence line east of the barn for a less crowded angle

Most visitors cluster directly in front of the T.A. Moulton Barn at the main gravel pullout. For a cleaner composition with more sagebrush foreground and fewer people in your frame, walk back from the fence line on the east side of the barn and use a longer focal length to compress the distance between the structure and the peaks behind it. This approach keeps the Teton Range prominent in the frame rather than shrinking it behind the barn the way a wide angle lens tends to do when you stand too close.

02

Dress for a cold morning even in summer

Jackson Hole valley mornings run cold well into June and the open flats around Antelope Flats Road do nothing to block the wind coming off the range. Wear a windproof layer over a midweight fleece so you can strip down as the sun clears the eastern ridge. Sturdy trail shoes work fine for the flat terrain around the barn but pack an extra pair of dry socks if you plan to walk through the sage flats after rain since the ground can hold moisture longer than it looks.

03

Grab coffee at Cowboy Coffee Co. in Jackson before heading north

If you are driving up from Jackson for a sunrise visit, Cowboy Coffee Co. on the Town Square at 125 N. Cache St. opens at 6 AM daily and sits directly on your route north toward Moose Junction. It is a local institution that roasts its own beans in Jackson Hole and serves solid breakfast sandwiches alongside the coffee. Picking up a hot drink here before the 30 minute drive to the barn means you arrive warm and ready before the crowds.

Lace up

Nearby Hikes

Trails worth your time when you're in the area.

easy

Taggart Lake trail

3.8 mi/419 ft gain

Starting from the Taggart Lake trailhead on Teton Park Road, this route crosses open sagebrush flats before entering a forest zone burned in the 1985 Beaver Creek fire. The regrowth there is still visible and gives you a clear look at how fire shapes forest succession in the Tetons. Taggart Lake itself sits in a glacially carved basin with the Cathedral Group peaks rising directly above the water.

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easy

Mormon Row and Antelope Flats loop

2.3 mi/187 ft gain

This flat gravel and dirt loop takes you past the T.A. Moulton Barn and the other remaining homestead structures along Mormon Row before looping back through open sagebrush terrain. Bison are frequently present on the flats throughout the route. The Teton Range stays visible to the west for nearly the entire walk making this one of the more scenic flat walks in the park.

View on alltrails.com
moderate

Phelps Lake loop

6.7 mi/603 ft gain

Leaving from the Laurance S. Rockefeller Preserve trailhead, this loop climbs through forest to the Death Canyon Shelf overlook before descending to Phelps Lake. The lake occupies a moraine dam left by glacial activity and sits at the mouth of Death Canyon with excellent views up into the range. The preserve trailhead has a small interpretive center worth stopping into before or after the hike.

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moderate

Jenny Lake loop

7.7 mi/738 ft gain

Jenny Lake sits in a basin carved by glaciers and ringed by conifer forest with the central Teton peaks rising to the west. The full loop circles the lake on a well maintained trail and can be shortened by taking the ferry across the southern section. Inspiration Point and the lower cascade of Hidden Falls are both accessible via a short side route from the western shore.

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hard

Delta Lake via Lupine Meadows

7.6 mi/2,299 ft gain

This route gains elevation quickly from the Lupine Meadows trailhead and finishes with a steep talus scramble to reach Delta Lake, a glacially fed tarn that sits directly below the Grand Teton. The water takes on a milky turquoise color from glacial flour suspended in the lake. The upper section requires careful footing on loose rock and route finding skills since there is no formal maintained trail above the Bradley and Taggart junction.

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Why it matters

Protecting Grand Teton

The T.A. Moulton Barn is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and sits within the Mormon Row Historic District, a designation that helps ensure the structures and the landscape around them remain intact for future visitors. Grand Teton National Park protects not just the geology and wildlife of the region but also the human history layered into places like Antelope Flats, where generations of families worked the land against the backdrop of the Teton Range. Keeping these places whole means that people a hundred years from now can still walk the same ground, see the same peaks, and understand what it took to settle this valley.

Rainier Hat Co. exists to support that kind of preservation directly. Every hat we make is connected to a specific park or place, and 100% of the profits from each sale go straight to the National Parks. Buying the Grand Teton National Park hat is a simple way to put money toward the landscapes and structures that make visits like this one possible. It is not a souvenir so much as a contribution, one that travels with you long after you leave the valley.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is T.A. Moulton Barn located?

The barn sits along Mormon Row in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming. Take Antelope Flats Road east from Highway 26/89 near Moose Junction and follow the signs toward Mormon Row. The barn appears on the south side of the road roughly two miles in.

Is there an entrance fee to visit the barn?

There is no separate fee to visit Mormon Row or T.A. Moulton Barn specifically, but you do need to pay the standard Grand Teton National Park entrance fee if you enter through a fee station. The America the Beautiful annual pass covers this.

What are the best times of day to photograph the barn?

Sunrise is the most popular time to shoot the barn because the early light catches the Teton peaks from the east, creating a warm glow on the range behind the structure. Late afternoon light also works well and tends to draw fewer visitors than dawn.

Can I go inside the barn?

No. The barn is a protected historic structure and entry is not permitted. You can walk around it and photograph it from the exterior, but the interior is closed to the public to preserve the building.

Is parking available at the barn?

There is a small gravel parking area along Mormon Row near the barn. It fills up quickly during peak season, especially at sunrise. Arriving very early or later in the afternoon gives you a much better chance of finding a spot without waiting.

What is Mormon Row and how does it relate to the barn?

Mormon Row is a historic district within Grand Teton National Park that preserves the remains of a homesteading community settled primarily in the 1890s and early 1900s. The T.A. Moulton Barn is the most photographed structure along the row, but several other homestead buildings and foundations remain visible along the route.

Who built T.A. Moulton Barn?

Thomas Alma Moulton built the barn starting around 1912 and continued adding to it over several decades. The Moulton family was part of the broader homesteading community that farmed and ranched this area of Jackson Hole before the land became part of the national park.

When is the best season to visit?

Each season offers something different. Summer brings wildflowers, bison grazing in the flats, and long daylight hours. Fall adds golden cottonwood color and crisp air. Winter covers the rooftop in snow and significantly reduces crowds. Spring can be muddy but offers dramatic skies and early wildlife activity.

Are bison often seen near the barn?

Yes. The Antelope Flats area around Mormon Row is one of the more reliable places in the park to see bison. They graze the flats throughout the year and frequently wander close to the barn, especially in summer and fall.

How close can I get to the barn?

You can walk right up to the fence line surrounding the structure. A short path leads from the parking area directly to the barn. Just stay on the established paths and respect any barriers or signage in place to protect the historic site.

Is the road to the barn paved?

Antelope Flats Road starts as paved but transitions to a gravel surface as you get closer to Mormon Row. Most standard passenger vehicles handle it without any trouble in dry conditions. After heavy rain or snow the road can get soft in spots.

Is the area accessible year round?

The barn is generally accessible year round though Antelope Flats Road can close temporarily during winter storms or heavy snow events. Check current road conditions with the park before visiting between November and April.

Are dogs allowed at Mormon Row?

Dogs are allowed in the Mormon Row area but must be kept on a leash no longer than six feet at all times. Keep in mind that bison and other wildlife are frequently present, so maintaining control of your dog is important for everyone's safety.

How long does a visit to the barn typically take?

Most people spend 30 to 60 minutes at the barn itself. If you walk the full Mormon Row loop to see the other homestead structures the visit extends to around 90 minutes to two hours depending on your pace.

What other structures are worth seeing along Mormon Row?

The John Moulton Barn sits just north of the T.A. Moulton Barn and is also well preserved. The Chambers homestead with its distinctive fence line and the Andy Chambers barn are worth a look as well. Walking the row gives you a clearer picture of what the settlement looked like at its peak.

What direction do the Tetons face from the barn?

The Teton Range rises to the west of Mormon Row. When you stand at the barn and look west you get a clear view of the peaks across the flat sagebrush terrain, which is why sunrise from the east lights up the mountains behind the barn so well.

Is a tripod useful for photography here?

Yes especially for sunrise and twilight shooting when light levels are low. The flat ground around the barn makes tripod placement easy. Bring a remote shutter release or use your camera's timer to avoid any shake during long exposures.

Are there restrooms near the barn?

There are no restrooms directly at the barn. The nearest facilities are at the Moose Visitor Center, which is a few miles west on Highway 89. Plan accordingly before making the drive out to Antelope Flats.

What wildlife might I see beyond bison?

The Antelope Flats area supports pronghorn, coyotes, red tailed hawks, and various songbirds throughout the year. Elk occasionally move through in fall. Scan the edges of the sage flats early in the morning for the best chance of seeing wildlife moving around.

Is there a fee to use the America the Beautiful pass here?

The America the Beautiful annual pass covers the Grand Teton entrance fee with no additional charge. You present it at the fee station on your way into the park. There is no extra cost to access Mormon Row or the barn once you are inside the park.

How far is the barn from Jackson, Wyoming?

Jackson is roughly 30 miles south of Mormon Row by road. The drive takes about 40 to 50 minutes depending on traffic and your route through the park. Highway 26/89 heading north from Jackson leads directly toward Moose Junction and the Antelope Flats Road turnoff.

What should I wear for a visit to the barn?

Dress in layers since the Jackson Hole valley can swing from warm afternoons to chilly mornings quickly, even in summer. Sturdy walking shoes work fine for the flat terrain. In winter bring insulated boots, a warm hat, and gloves as temperatures can drop well below freezing.

Why is this barn so famous compared to others on Mormon Row?

The T.A. Moulton Barn has been photographed for over a century and became a widely recognized image largely because of how the structure frames against the Teton peaks. Its weathered wood, gambrel roof, and position on the open flats create a composition that photographers have returned to repeatedly.

Is Mormon Row a National Historic District?

Yes. Mormon Row was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997 as a historic district. The designation recognizes the area's significance as an example of early 20th century homesteading culture in the American West.

Are drones allowed at the barn or along Mormon Row?

Drone use is prohibited in Grand Teton National Park. This applies to the entire park including Mormon Row and the area around the barn. Launching, landing, or operating an unmanned aircraft in the park is not permitted regardless of the purpose.