Old Town Farm is currently available for tours by passengers of the Majestic America Line riverboats which includes the American Queen, Mississippi Queen and the Delta Queen. During their stop at Point Pleasant, West Virginia, tourists from these riverboats may tour the farm as part of the Battle of Point Pleasant History tour.

The tour of Old Town Farm focuses on three aspects of this farm: the modern day working farm, the historical Italianate Revival Mansion, and the Old Town Shawnee Indian Settlement.
While touring the modern day working farm, visitors will get a glimpse into the day to day endeavours that occur while rearing a herd of cattle, including the balancing of herd size, food lots, herd health, etc.
The next part of the tour is of the historic Italianate Revival Mansion. Erected in 1866, it was home to the descendants of General Andrew Lewis and Colonel Charles Lewis for more than one hundred years. Built entirely of bricks that were fired on site and finished with wood that came from trees that were grown on the farm and then harvested for use on the interior, the Mansion tour will inform visitors to step back into history and experience the grandeur of an era past. Visitors will also learn a little about the history of the Lewis family and their influence in the evolution of Point Pleasant and West Virginia, all while touring the manicured grounds and admiring the intricate beauty of this 19th century home.

Another aspect of Old Town farm tour is the recreation of an original Shawnee Indian dwelling called a wegiwa (wigwam) that would have been originally located near Old Town Creek in the bottomland of the farm. This is a replica of what one would have seen in the Shawnee village that once stood on this land for many years before the colonials and the militia came to the area. Native American re-enactors and living historians will guide visitors through the history of the settlement throughout the 17th and 18th centuries and inform them of the customs and traditions of day to day life of the natives in the area.