Salem, Massachusetts Salem, Massachusetts Flag of Salem, Massachusetts Flag Official seal of Salem, Massachusetts Salem, Massachusetts is positioned in the US Salem, Massachusetts - Salem, Massachusetts Salem is a coastal town/city in Essex County, Massachusetts, in the United States, positioned on Massachusetts' North Shore.
The city's reported populace was 41,340 at the 2010 census. Salem and Lawrence are the county seats of Essex County, though the county government was abolished in 1999. The town/city is home to the House of Seven Gables, Salem State University, the Salem Willows Park, Forrest River Park, Federal Street District, Charter Street Historic District, and the Peabody Essex Museum. Salem is a residentiary and tourist region which includes the neighborhoods of Salem Neck, Downtown Salem District, The Point, South Salem and North Salem, Witchcraft Heights, Pickering Wharf, and the Mc - Intire Historic District (named after Salem's famous architect and carver Samuel Mc - Intire). Much of the city's cultural identity reflects its part as the locale of the Salem witch trials of 1692, as featured in Arthur Miller's The Crucible.
Police cars are adorned with witch logos, a small-town enhance school is known as the Witchcraft Heights Elementary School, the Salem High School athletic squads are titled the Witches, and Gallows Hill is presently used as a playing field for various sports, originally believed to be the site of various enhance hangings.
Tourists know Salem as a mix of meaningful historical sites and a vibrant downtown that has more than 60 restaurants, cafes, and coffee shops. In 2012, the Retailers Association of Massachusetts chose Salem for their inaugural "Best Shopping District" award. More than one million tourists from all around the world visit Salem annually, bringing in at least $100 million in tourism spending each year. More than 250,000 visited Salem over Halloween weekend in 2016. 9.5 The Salem Ferry 12 Salem Harbor Power Station 14.1 Salem State University See also: Timeline of Salem, Massachusetts, history Salem is positioned at the mouth of the Naumkeag river at the site of an ancient American Indian village and trading center.
In recognition of this peaceful transition to the new government, the name of the settlement was changed to Salem, a hellenized form of the word for "peace" in Hebrew ( , shalom) which is mentioned many times in the Bible and associated with Jerusalem. In 1628, Endecott ordered that the Great ("Governor's") House be moved from Cape Ann, reassembling it on what is now Washington Street north of Church Street. When Higginson appeared in Salem, he wrote that "we found a faire home newly assembled for the Governor" which was remarkable for being two stories high. A year later, the Massachusetts Bay Charter was issued creating the Massachusetts Bay Colony with Matthew Craddock as its governor in London and Endecott as its governor in the colony. John Winthrop was propel Governor in late 1629, and appeared with the Winthrop Fleet in 1630, beginning the Great Migration. In 1639, Endecott's was one of the signatures on the building contract for enlarging the meeting home in Town House Square for the First Church in Salem.
Samuel Skelton was the first pastor of the First Church of Salem, which is the initial Puritan church in North America. Endecott already had a close relationship with Skelton, having been converted by him, and Endecott considered him as his spiritual father. Salem originally encompassed much of the North Shore, including Marblehead.
Most of the accused in the Salem witch trials lived in close-by "Salem Village", now known as Danvers, although a several lived on the outskirts of Salem.
Salem is also momentous in legal history as the site of the Dorthy Talbye trial, where a mentally ill woman was hanged for murdering her daughter because Massachusetts made no distinct ion at the time between insanity and criminal behavior. On February 26, 1775, patriots raised the drawbridge at the North River, preventing British Colonel Alexander Leslie and his 300 troops of the 64th Regiment of Foot from seizing stores and ammunition hidden in North Salem.
Salem Harbor, petroleum on canvas, Fitz Hugh Lane, 1853.
By 1790, Salem had turn into the sixth biggest city in the country, and a world-famous seaport especially in the China Trade, along with exporting codfish to Europe and the West Indies, importing sugar and molasses from the West Indies, tea from China, and products depicted on the town/city seal from the East Indies in particular Sumatran pepper.
The Salem India Story by Vanita Shastri narrates the adventures of the Salem seamen who connected the far corners of the globe through trade.
This also led to the mission of diplomatist Edmund Roberts, who negotiated a treaty with Said bin Sultan, Sultan of Muscat and Oman on September 21, 1833. In 1837, the sultan moved his chief place of residence to Zanzibar and welcomed Salem citizen Richard Waters as a United States consul of the early years. The Old China Trade left a momentous mark in two historic districts, Chestnut Street District, part of the Samuel Mc - Intire Historic District including 407 buildings, and the Salem Maritime National Historic Site, consisting of 12 historic structures and about 9 acres (36,000 m ) of territory along the waterfront in Salem.
Salem was incorporated as a town/city on March 23, 1836, and adopted a town/city seal in 1839 with the motto "Divitis Indiae usque ad ultimum sinum", Latin for "To the rich East Indies until the last lap." Salem and its silting harbor were increasingly eclipsed by close-by Boston and New York City.
More than 400 homes were finished in the Great Salem Fire of 1914, leaving 3,500 families homeless from a blaze that began in the Korn Leather Factory at 57 Boston Street.
Coast Guard established a new seaplane facility in Salem because there was no space to grew the Gloucester Air Station at Ten Pound Island.
Coast Guard Air Station Salem was positioned on Winter Island, an extension of Salem Neck which juts out into Salem Harbor.
In October 1944, Air Station Salem was officially designated as the first Air-Sea Rescue station on the easterly seaboard.
The station's surviving facilities are part of Salem's Winter Island Marine Park.
Salem Harbor was deep enough to host a seadrome with three sea lanes, offering a range of take-off headings irrespective of wind direction unless there was a strong steady wind from the east.
In 2011, the City of Salem finalized plans for the 30-acre (12 ha) Winter Island Park and squared off against inhabitants who are against bringing two power generating windmills to the tip of Winter Island. The Renewable Energy Task Force, along with Energy and Sustainability Manager, Paul Marquis, have recommended the assembly of a 1.5-megawatt power turbine at the tip of Winter Island, which is the furthest point from residences and where the winds are the strongest. In 2011, a master plan was advanced with help from the planning and design firm, Cecil Group of Boston and Bioengineering Group of Salem.
The City of Salem paid $45,000 in federal cash. In the long term, the projected cost to rehabilitate just the barracks was $1.5 million.
This is a very meaningful universal since Fort Pickering guarded Salem Harbor as far back as the 17th century. In 1637, the first muster was held on Salem Common, where for the first time a regiment of militia drilled for the common defense of a multi-community area, thus laying the foundation for what became the Army National Guard.
On August 19, 2010, Governor of Massachusetts Deval Patrick signed HB1145, "An Act Designating the City of Salem as the Birthplace of the National Guard." This as later allowed by the U.S.
House of Representatives in March 2012, and was signed into law by President Barack Obama on January 10, 2013. This executive order designated the City of Salem, Mass., as the place of birth of the U.S.
On April 14, 2012, Salem jubilated the 375th anniversary of the first muster on Salem Common, with more than 1,000 troops taking part in ceremonies and a parade. The 2015 single "Spirit of Salem" by Majungas was inspired by Salem's October tourist attraction Haunted Happenings. Salem Secret Underground:The History of the Tunnels in the City goes over a grand conspiracy that was engineered by the son of America's first millionaire paid for by many of our country's most influential politicians amid the Adam's administration that involved 3 miles of tunnels to avoid paying duties on imports.
Salem Secret Underground: The History of the Tunnels in the City.
Salem, MA: Salem House Press.
In June 1970, Bewitched filmed on locale in Salem.
In Salem, outside the Essex Superior Court House and Old Granite Courthouse. The WGN America Salem (TV series) is set in the town/city during the Salem witch trials.
Historic images of Salem Salem Harbor in 1907 The Salem Ferry approaching its dock off Blaney Street Salem is positioned at 42 31 1 N 70 53 55 W (42.516845, -70.898503). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 18.1 square miles (47 km2), of which 8.1 square miles (21 km2) is territory and 9.9 square miles (26 km2), or 55.09%, is water.
Salem lies on Massachusetts Bay between Salem Harbor, which divides the town/city from much of neighboring Marblehead to the southeast, and Beverly Harbor, which divides the town/city from Beverly along with the Danvers River, which feeds into the harbor.
Between the two harbors lies Salem Neck and Winter Island, which are divided from each other by Cat Cove, Smith Pool (located between the two territory causeways to Winter Island), and Juniper Cove.
The Salem Neck neighborhood lies northeast of downtown, and North Salem lies to the west of it, on the other side of the North River.
South Salem is south of the South River, lying mostly along the banks of Salem Harbor southward.
Downtown Salem lies 15 miles (24 km) northeast of Boston, 16 miles (26 km) southwest of Gloucester and Cape Ann, and 19 miles (31 km) southeast of Lawrence, the other governmental center of county of Essex County.
Salem is bordered by Beverly to the north, Danvers to the northwest, Peabody to the west, Lynn to the south, Swampscott to the southeast, and Marblehead to the southeast.
The connection between Salem and Beverly is made athwart the Danvers River and Beverly Harbor by three bridges, the Kernwood Bridge to the west, and a barns bridge and the Essex Bridge, from the territory between Collins Cove and the North River, to the east.
Route 1 - A passes through the easterly side of the city, through South Salem towards Swampscott.
The Nathaniel Bowditch is a 92-foot (28 m) high-speed catamaran that travels from Salem to Boston in 50 minutes from May to October and had its maiden voyage on June 22, 2006.
The Salem Ferry is titled after Nathaniel Bowditch, who was from Salem and wrote the American Practical Navigator. Ridership increased every year from 2006 to 2010, when it peaked with 89,000, but in 2011 service was cut back because of the dramatic rise in fuel prices. The Salem Ferry is docked at lthe Derby Waterfront District. The ferry was purchased by the City of Salem with the use of grant cash that veiled 90 percent of the $2.1 million purchase price. Because of the cutback in service amid the 2011 season, Mayor Kim Driscoll is now seeking a new operator who can run the ferry seven days a week from May to October.
Commuter ferry to Boston. The Salem Ferry will be running seven days a week for the 2012 season starting the first weekend in June and going through to Halloween. Boston Harbor Cruises, the contractor that operates the city's commuter ferry to Boston, runs their biggest and quickest vessel between Salem and Hingham for the last two weekends in October.
The company's high-speed ferry service to Provincetown concludes in October, freeing up its 600-passenger boat for service between Salem and Hingham.
The ferry ride between Hingham and Salem takes one hour.
The Salem City councilors allowed a five-year contract with Boston Harbor Cruises to operate the city's commuter ferry from 2013 to 2017. Also new for the 2013 season, Boston Harbor Cruises will offer a 20 percent discount to Salem inhabitants for non-commuter tickets.
The City of Salem has allowed a cyclic restaurant with a liquor license at The Salem Ferry dock to be directed by Boston Harbor Cruises.
The latest data from 2015 point to 61,000 riders, with around 11,000 being commuters, as stated to Boston Harbor Cruises, which runs the Salem Ferry. In Salem, there is a program called Salem Spins, that offers bicycles, no-charge of charge, for use around the city.
The program started in 2011 with a fleet of 20 bicycles and is split between two hubs, at Salem State University and downtown, near the Hawthorne Hotel. In 2011, Salem was awarded $25,000 from the Green Communities grant program, which went toward the purchase of the bike fleet.
Four are positioned at the Museum Place Mall near the Peabody Essex Museum and the other four are in the South Harbor garage athwart the street from the Salem Waterfront Hotel. The program started in January 2013 and will be no-charge of charge for two years, allowing citizens to charge their electric cars and other electric vehicles for up to six hours.
This program was paid for by a grant from the state of Massachusetts due to Salem's status as a Massachusetts Green Community. North Shore Medical Center (NSMC) is positioned in Salem and is the second biggest improve hospital fitness in Massachusetts.
Captain John Bertram (1796 1882) lived in Salem and is the founder of Salem Hospital, which was later retitled North Shore Medical Center (NSMC).
In 1873, Captain John Bertram gave t of $25,000 in cash, plus a brick mansion on Charter Street to problematic Salem Hospital.
From the initial building on Charter Street, Salem Hospital moved to the current locale on Highland Avenue in 1917.
After John Bertram died in March 1882, his widow donated their home, a mansion assembled in the High Style Italianate with brick and brownstone for materials at 370 Essex Street, and this became the Salem Public Library. In addition, the John Bertram House is now a home for the elderly. Map of Salem and Harbor, 1883 The first step in the redevelopment was in 2006, when the State of Massachusetts gave Salem $1,000,000. The bulk of the cash - $750,000 - was earmarked for acquisition of the Blaney Street landing, the private, 2-acre (8,100 m2) site off Derby Street used by the ferry, and Salem Harbor.
Another $200,000 was allowed for the design of the new Salem wharf, a large pier prepared for the landing, which officials said could be used by small cruise ships, commercial vessels and fishing boats.
In October 2010, Mayor Driscoll announced that the town/city would formally acquire the Blaney Street parcel from Dominion Energy, paving the way for the Salem Wharf project.
The City of Salem secured $1.25 million from the Massachusetts Seaport Advisory Council and $2.5 million in federal grant dollars to move forward with the assembly of the project.
The City of Salem's plans call for a total build-out of the current Blaney Street pier, known as the Salem Wharf project.
When finished, the Blaney Street pier will be home to small to medium-sized cruise ships, commercial vessels and the Salem Ferry.
In 2010, in early phase work to be rather than for the 2011 season, a contractor was running underground utility cables and erecting an interim terminal building that will be used by the Salem Ferry, replacing the current trailer.
This is one of the early and key pieces of the Salem Pier, which the town/city hopes to have instead of by 2014 and is the key to eventually bring cruise ships to Salem. At the end of the 2011 season of the Salem Ferry, in the late fall of 2011, after the ferry season ended, contractors were to start building the first section of the T-shaped, 350-foot (110 m) pier.
As of April 2011, the City of Salem had secured half of the $20 million and still needed to secure about $10 million in state and federal funds to complete this waterfront pier. Salem Harbor Power Station Original Salem Harbor Station in 2012 In May 2011, after years of legal battles, protests, and one recent fatal accident, the owner of the Salem Harbor Power Station announced it will close down the facility permanently. Salem Harbor Station was a 60-year-old power plant that was owned by Dominion of Virginia.
The City of Salem was awarded a $200,000 grant from the Clean Energy Center before to the closure of the plant.
This grant cash is being used to plan for the eventual re-use of the property. The City of Salem reached out to state and federal officials to ask for their cooperation and assistance in planning for the future and to furnish cash, in an accomplishment to clean up the 62-acre site. Footprint Power, a startup New Jersey-based energy company, announced on June 29, 2012, that it had signed an agreement to acquire Salem Harbor Station from Dominion Energy of Virginia. Footprint Power prepared to demolish the 63-acre waterfront site that has towering smokestacks, a coal pile, and petroleum tanks.
Footprint said its plans are consistent with the recommendations of a town/city study instead of earlier that year on the future use of the power plant site. The City of Salem required Footprint to demolish the existing plant and stacks.
Salem State University Logo of Salem State University Salem State University is the biggest of the nine schools comprising the state college fitness in Massachusetts (the five University of Massachusetts campuses are a separate system), with 7,500 undergraduates and 2,500 graduate students; its five campuses encompass 115 acres (0.47 km2) and include 33 buildings.
The Salem State Foundation hosts an annual lecture series, featuring high-profile speakers from around the world. was originally assembled in the 1950s and in January 2014 a $18,600,000 universal was announced with development. The college was established in 1854 as the Salem Normal School (for teacher training) based on the educational principles espoused by Horace Mann, considered to be the "Father of American Public Education." Salem State University enrolls over 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students representing 27 states and 57 foreign countries, and is one of the biggest state universities in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
In 2013 the $74 million, 122,000-square-foot library is going to open on the Salem State University campus. The new library will have more than 150 enhance computers and 1,000 seats of study space, from tables and desks to lounge chairs scattered throughout the building. On July 28, 2010 Governor of Massachusetts Deval Patrick signed into law a bill that transforms Salem State College into Salem State University. Salem State University plans to build a $36 to $42 million dorm for 350 to 400 students.
Construction starts in the spring of 2014. In April 2014, Salem State University announced a $25,000,000 fund, and at the time of the announcement, there was already $15,000,000 committed from donations and the cash will be used for a range of things from expanding global study programs, more faculty, brand new computers, scholarships and continued support of experienced evolution for the staff. Nathaniel Bowditch School, and Salem High School are positioned on Wilson Street.
Salem Academy Charter School and Bentley Academy Charter School are also enhance schools. The Bowditch School has grades K-8.
Salem also once had a very strong Roman Catholic school system.
See also: Chestnut Street District and Salem Maritime National Historic Site The Gedney House is a historic home exhibition assembled about 1665 and is the 2nd earliest home in Salem.
One of the most prominent homes in Salem is The Witch House, the only structure in Salem with direct ties to the Salem witch trials of 1692.
The Witch House is owned and directed by the City of Salem as a historic home exhibition. In 2007, the town/city launched the Haunted Passport program which offers visitors discounts and benefits from small-town tourist attractions and retailers from October to April. The goal of the program is to get visitors to come back to Salem after Halloween and experience businesses that may not be directly tied to Halloween.
In 2005, the conflict came to a head over plans by the cable tv network TV Land to erect a bronze statue of Elizabeth Montgomery, who played the comic witch "Samantha" in the 1960s series Bewitched. A several special episodes of the series were actually filmed in Salem, and TV Land said that the statue memorialized the 35th anniversary of those episodes.
In 2000, the replica tall ship Friendship of Salem was rather than and sailed to Salem Harbor, where she sits today.
In 2006, with the assistance of a 1.6 million dollar grant and additional funds provided by the City of Salem, Mayor Driscoll launched The Nathaniel Bowditch, a 92-foot catamaran with a top speed of 30 knots which makes the trip between Salem and Boston in just under an hour. Waterfront redevelopment - The first step in the redevelopment was in 2006, when the State of Massachusetts gave Salem $1,000,000. Bowditch, who was born in Salem and had a home on North Street, is considered the founder of undivided maritime navigation.
She is now based at Salem's Pickering Wharf Marina, where she takes the paying enhance for cruises on Salem Sound. Salem Harborwalk opened in July 2010 to jubilate the rebirth of the Salem waterfront as a origin of recreation for visitors as well as the small-town community.
The 1,100-foot (340 m) walkway extends from the region of the Salem Fire Station to the Salem Waterfront Hotel. Founded in 1799, it is the earliest continuously operating exhibition in the United States. The exhibition owns and exhibits a number of historic homes in downtown Salem.
The Misery Islands which are a nature reserve were established in 1935 and positioned in Salem Sound and are managed by the Trustees of Reservations.
The Old Salem Jail, an active correctional facility until 1991, once homed captured British soldiers from the War of 1812.
The universal went into a long phase of stagnation when in 1999 the county government was dissolved, resulting in the sale of Salem Jail by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the City of Salem for $1. The Old Salem Jail complex was retitled 50 Saint Peter Street and is now private property, with private residences. In 1855, positioned on 210 Essex Street, was established the Salem Five Cents Bank, one of the earliest still functioning American banks.
Naturalization ceremony on the stairs of the Custom House, Salem Maritime National Historic Site See also: National Register of Historic Places listings in Salem, Massachusetts 1665), one of the earliest homes in Salem; positioned on High Street and Summer Street Salem Maritime National Historic Site, the only remaining endured waterfront from the U.S.
Salem Willows Park (1858), a small oceanfront amusement park The Witch House, the home of the Salem witch trials investigator Jonathan Corwin, and the only building still standing in Salem with direct ties to the witch trials Popular legend places the execution of the Salem Witches near this site.
The Pickman House, assembled about 1664, believed to be Salem's earliest surviving building John Hathorne (1641 1717), the "Hanging Judge" in Salem witch trials Dudley Leavitt (1720 1762), early Harvard-educated Congregational minister, New Hampshire native, married to Mary Pickering, Salem's Leavitt Street titled for him.
(1763 1843), early Salem merchant for whom Salem's Pickman Street is titled Redmond (1883-1966), United States Army officer and Chief of the National Guard Bureau. He was educated in Salem and became a real estate agent. In 1916 he served on the Mexican border amid the Pancho Villa Expedition. 1584 1634), first pastor of the First Church in Salem, the initial Puritan church in North America Jack Welch, former chairman and CEO of General Electric; interval up in Salem and attended Salem High School "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Salem city, Massachusetts".
"NRHP nomination for Downtown Salem Historic District".
"'We're still a hot spot' " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem titled "Best Shopping District" in the state for 2012".
"Defense.gov News Article: Salem Takes Honor as National Guard's Birthplace".
"Salem designated as place of birth of the National Guard".
https://salem.org/media Tourists from all over the world make up the over one million citizens that visit Salem annually, and bring in over $100 million dollars annually in tourism spending.
Salem News.
More than a dozen old planters followed Conant to Salem, Gardner and Tylley included.
Richard Gildrie, Salem Massachusetts 1626-1683, 4.
(2009) Salem's Witch House: A Touchstone to Antiquity The History Press (via google.com) Jeffrey, "A 'Short' History of the First Church in Salem," First Church in Salem, Unitarian Web Site , Retrieved 4 February, 2011".
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"Plan calls for amphitheater, other fixes at Winter Island " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"The National Guard - Guard jubilates 373rd First Muster on Salem Common".
"Governor Patrick Designates Salem as Birthplace of National Guard".
"National Guard bill passes muster with House " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Muster's 375th anniversary today " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"THE ELIAS HASKET DERBY FEDERAL CARVED MAHOGANY SIDE CHAIR | CARVING ATTRIBUTED TO SAMUEL MCINTIRE (1757-1811), SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS, 1790-1798 | American Furniture & Decorative Arts Auction | side chair, Furniture & Lighting | Christie's".
"'Bride Wars' takes Salem by storm - Salem, Massachusetts - Salem Gazette".
"A real Zombie visits Salem " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"CASTING call " Business " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"No more American Hustle movie stars in Salem, MA".
"The Salem Harbor Plan".
"Salem ferry cuts back to three days a week " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem may dump ferry operator".
"Salem ferry operator: 'It's not working out' " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"The Salem Ferry".
The Salem Ferry.
"Commuter trip is in ferry bid " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem ferry delayed " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Ferry to run between Salem and South Shore for Halloween " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem ferry to get five-year contract".
Salem News.
Salem News.
"A SECOND CYCLE " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem Installs Vehicle Charging Stations".
Salem, Massachusetts Patch.
City of Salem, MA.
"City of Salem, MA - Approved Minutes, May 13, 2010".
City of Salem, MA.
"City of Salem, MA - Approved Minutes, February 12, 2009".
"History - Salem Public Library".
"Salem gets $1 - M for waterfront " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"State awards $1.75 - M to Blaney Street wharf universal " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Dominion to Sell Blaney Street Property to City of Salem - SALEM, Mass., June 7 /PRNewswire/".
"Salem is focusing its sights on shore " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
City of Salem, MA.
"City of Salem, MA - City to purchase Blaney Street parcel today".
"Salem pier work under way " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem Harbor Power Station To Close In 2014 " CBS Boston".
"Grant of $2.5 - M to aid wharf makeover " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Salem, Mass.
"Dominion: Entire Salem power plant will close June 1, 2014 - Salem, Massachusetts - Salem Gazette".
"Salem Harbor Footprint".
"Footprint Power of New Jersey to buy Salem Harbor Power Station - The Boston Globe".
"Company inks deal for plant " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
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Salem News.
"Salem (city) Quick - Facts from the US Enumeration Bureau".
"Salem State University: Construction on New Residence Hall Begins".
"Salem State University: Facts and Figures".
Salem, Massachusetts: Salem State University.
"Salem State University Series".
Salem, Massachusetts: Salem State University.
"Salem State University: Contact Us and Directions".
"Salem State College Mainstage Theatre - Arts - Boston.org".
"Salem State University: Theatre".
"History of Salem State University".
Salem, Massachusetts: Salem State University.
Salem News.
Salem News.
"Salem State University: Massachusetts council accords Salem State college status; University designation will benefit region in various ways".
"New Dorm Coming to Salem State University".
Salem, Massachusetts Patch.
Salem News.
Salem News.
"Time line of a crisis " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"Schools regroup; cops probe $4.7 - M deficit " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
Joseph School in Salem method " Local News " Salem - News.com, Salem, MA".
"The Witch House (Jonathan Corwin House), Salem, Massachusetts".
The Salem News.
The Salem News.
"Salem Massachusetts - Friendship Overview".
Salem, Massachusetts: salemweb.com.
"The Schooner Fame ~ The Salem Privateer - Harbor Cruises in Salem, MA".
The Salem News.
Salem, Massachusetts: Peabody Essex Museum.
The Misery Islands which are a nature reserve were established in 1935 and positioned in Salem Sound and are managed by the Trustees of Reservations.
"Pioneer Village: Salem 1630".
Salem, Massachusetts: salemweb.com.
The Salem News.
The Salem News.
The Salem News.
"Salem Five Cents Savings Bank (1892)".
"Salem Massachusetts - Salem Architecture Salem Architecture: Mc - Intire".
A Memorial of the Old and New Tabernacle, Salem, Mass., 1854-5.
City of Salem, MA (2008-06-17).
"This resulted from the affiliation between Salem's Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) and the Ota Folk Museum in Japan".
History of Salem, Massachusetts in Three Volumes.
Full images at University of Virginia e - Text Center and the Salem Witch Trial Documentary Archive and Transcription Project.
1872 Atlas of Essex County Map of Salem.
1884 Atlas of Essex County Salem South.
Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts.
1897 Atlas of Salem Massachusetts Index Map.
1911 Atlas of Salem, Massachusetts.
Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts to 1849.[dead link] Published 1916, 1918, 1924, 1925.
Death of an empire : the rise and murderous fall of Salem, America's richest city, 1st ed., New York : Thomas Dunne Books, 2011.
Goff, John, "Looking at Salem's beginnings: The White and Gardner family contributions", Salem Gazette, Gate - House News Service story, December 29, 2007 Morris, Richard J., "Redefining the Economic Elite in Salem, Massachusetts, 1759-1799: A Tale of Evolution, Not Revolution", The New England Quarterly, Vol.
National Park Service, "Salem Maritime Salem Maritime National Historic Site: Official Map and Guide", United States Department of the Interior Norton, Mary Beth, In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692, 1st ed., New York : Alfred A.
Hidden History of Salem, 1st ed., Charleston, SC : The History Press, 2010.
"Salem Women's Heritage Trail," Salem, MA: Salem Chamber of Commerce, 2000.
Smith-Dalton, Maggi (Salem History Society) "A history of spiritualism and the occult in Salem : the rise of witch city," Charleston, SC : History Press, 2012.https://www.worldcat.org/title/history-of-spiritualism-and-the-occult-in-salem-the-rise-of-witch-city/oclc/8086 - 84425&referer=brief_results Smith-Dalton, Maggi (Salem History Society) "Stories & shadows from Salem's past : Naumkeag notations,"American Chronicles Series,Charleston, SC : History Press, 2010.https://www.worldcat.org/title/stories-shadows-from-salems-past-naumkeag-notations/oclc/6425 - 11300&referer=brief_results Wikimedia Commons has media related to Salem, Massachusetts.
Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclop dia article about Salem, Massachusetts.
Wikisource-logo.svg "Salem, a town/city and one of the county-seats (Lawrence is the other) of Essex county, Massachusetts".
Categories: Salem, Massachusetts - Cities in Massachusetts - Populated coastal places in Massachusetts - Witchcraft - Populated places established in 1626 - County seats in Massachusetts - Salem witch trials - 1626 establishments in Massachusetts - Cities in Essex County, Massachusetts
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