🏛️ Attractions & Culture
Historical Sites in Salem
Salem's history extends well beyond the witch trials. From Derby Wharf (built 1762) to the Custom House where Nathaniel Hawthorne worked, to Federal Street's surviving Federal-style mansions, the city is dense with NPS markers, historical plaques, and preserved buildings from the 1600s through the 1800s.
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Bewitched Sculpture
★ 4.7Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Bewitched statue at Lappin Park (corner of Essex and Washington) depicts Elizabeth Montgomery as Samantha riding a broomstick under a crescent moon. Dedicated June 15, 2005, donated by TV Land. Tradition: rub Samantha's nose for good luck.
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Captain William Driver Park
★ 4.5309 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Captain William Driver Park is a small Salem public park at 309 Essex Street, named for the Salem-born 19th-century sea captain credited with nicknaming the American flag 'Old Glory.' A quieter green space on the upper end of Essex Street.
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Charter Street Cemetery Welcome Center
★ 4.543R Charter St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Charter Street Cemetery at 51 Charter Street is Salem's oldest cemetery, founded in 1637, and the final resting place of several notable historical Salem figures. The Welcome Center next to the cemetery opened recently inside the 17th-century Pickman House.
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Derby Wharf Light Station
★ 4.7Salem, MA 01970, USA
Derby Wharf Light Station sits at the end of Derby Wharf inside Salem Maritime National Historic Site, an automated 1871 lighthouse open for free public access. Visitors walk the wharf out to the light for harbor views.
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Destination Salem Visitor Information
★ 4.6245 Derby St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Destination Salem Visitor Information at 245 Derby Street is Salem's official visitor center, where staff hand out maps, brochures, and guidance for navigating the city. Run by the Destination Salem tourism organization.
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East India Square
★ 4.3158 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
East India Fountain Square is a granite fountain on Essex Street designed by artist John Collins, nodding to Salem's deep maritime ties to the ocean. The fountain echoes the city's topography and has become a downtown gathering point — kids splashing in the water in summer, history-curious visitors reading the engraved past, and residents strolling by on warm evenings.
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First Church in Salem, Unitarian Universalist
★ 4.5316 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
First Church in Salem, Unitarian Universalist was founded in August 1629 by Massachusetts Bay Colony Puritans — one of the oldest Protestant churches in North America and the first governed by congregational polity. The congregation remains self-governing and welcomes all visitors regardless of background. Guided tours offered alongside Sunday worship at 10:30am with fellowship hour after.
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Fort Lee
★ 4.4Fort Ave, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Fort Lee is a 1776 Revolutionary-era earthwork fortification on Salem Neck, also active during the War of 1812. The remnants are now a public park overlooking the harbor — open access for walking and views.
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Gallows Hill Museum/Theatre
★ 4.57 Lynde St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Gallows Hill at 7 Lynde Street is a Salem witch-trial attraction combining live theatrical performances with interactive exhibits — a main show mixing history, witch lore, and special effects, plus The Lost Museum walk-through and costumed-guide trolley tours.
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Gallows Hill Park
★ 4.1Gallows Hill Park, Mansell Pkwy, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Gallows Hill Park is a Salem hilltop park historically associated with the 1692 witch trial executions (the actual execution site at Proctor's Ledge was rediscovered nearby). Today it's a public park with green space and city views.
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Hamilton Hall
★ 4.69 Chestnut St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Hamilton Hall at 9 Chestnut Street is an 1805 Federal-style hall designed by master architect Samuel McIntire, now used as an events venue for weddings and private rentals.
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Historic Derby Wharf
★ 4.8Salem, MA 01970, USA
Derby Wharf is a 2,045-foot historic structure extending into Salem Harbor, built starting in 1762 by Richard Derby and his son Elias Hasket Derby — once headquarters of an international trading empire. Now a National Park Service site within Salem Maritime National Historical Park, hosting the Friendship of Salem vessel.
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Historic Nathaniel Bowditch House
★ 3.3North St @ Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Historic Nathaniel Bowditch House marks the home of the Salem-born mathematician and astronomer (1773–1838) who wrote 'The New American Practical Navigator' — a navigation manual still carried on US Navy ships. Located near the corner of North and Essex Streets.
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Nathaniel Hawthorne Statue
★ 4.920 Hawthorne Blvd, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Nathaniel Hawthorne Statue on Hawthorne Boulevard was designed by sculptor Bela Lyon Pratt and installed in 1925, depicting the author seated on a rock with a tree stump behind him, modeled on an 1861 photograph. Restored by the city in 2017.
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Old Town Hall
★ 4.632 Derby Square, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Old Town Hall at 32 Derby Square is a Federal-style building erected in 1816 — the namesake of the Old Town Hall National Historic District. Now a cultural and rental facility hosting arts events, performances, weddings, and private celebrations rather than municipal operations.
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Proctor's Ledge Memorial
★ 4.633 Proctor, Pope St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Proctor's Ledge Memorial marks the actual execution site of the 19 victims hanged during the 1692 Salem witch trials — a location confirmed by researchers in 2016 after centuries of misbelief that executions occurred at Gallows Hill's summit. Designed by landscape architect Martha Lyon, the memorial was dedicated July 19, 2017, with a semi-circular stone wall engraved with each victim's name. Located at Pope Street and Boston Street.
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Roger Conant Statue
★ 4.62 Brown St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Roger Conant Statue stands at Washington Square North in front of the Salem Witch Museum, depicting Salem's 1626 founder — originally credited as the leader of the band that left a failed Cape Ann fishing colony to establish Naumkeag (now Salem). Erected in 1913.
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Ropes Mansion and Garden
★ 4.7318 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Ropes Mansion at 318 Essex Street is a Georgian-style house built 1727–1729 and renovated as a Colonial Revival home in 1894 — one of New England's most thoroughly documented historic houses. Managed by the Peabody Essex Museum: 15 rooms with original 18th-and-19th-century furnishings, open seasonally for self-guided tours. The 1912 Colonial Revival garden behind the house is open year-round, dawn to dusk, free.
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Salem Athenaeum
★ 4.9337 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Salem Athenaeum is a private membership library in Salem with current and historical book collections, cultural programming, and a quiet reading-room setting. The institution itself functions as a working link to Salem's literary and civic history.
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Salem Common
★ 4.7N Washington Square, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Salem Common is a 9+ acre historic park established 1803 in the Salem Common Historic District. Site of the First Muster of the East Regiment in 1637 — the origin of the National Guard. Features recreational paths, a 1926 Colonial Revival bandstand, Washington Arch, and regular community events.
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Salem Common Bandstand
★ 4.725 Washington Square W, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Salem Common Bandstand is an octagonal Colonial Revival structure designed by Philip Horton Smith, built in 1926 for Salem's Tercentenary. Roman Doric columns, open arches, and a domed roof topped with a pineapple. Restored by the city in 2020.
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Salem Maritime National Historical Park
★ 4.6160 Derby St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
Salem Maritime National Historical Park was established in 1938 as the first National Historic Site in the United States, covering nine acres along Salem's waterfront. The park encompasses twelve historic structures including wharves, the Friendship of Salem ship, the Customs House, and period homes — preserving over 600 years of New England's maritime history.
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Salem Witch Museum
★ 3.719 1/2 N Washington Square, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Salem Witch Museum has been operating since 1972 inside a Gothic Revival former church on Salem Common, presenting the 1692 trials through life-size stage sets with audio narration plus guided tours of changing exhibits. Mission focuses on amplifying the voices of innocent victims of historical and contemporary witch hunts.
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Salem Witch Trials Memorial
★ 4.624 Liberty St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Salem Witch Trials Memorial sits at 24 Liberty Street next to the Old Burying Point Cemetery, designed by Maggie Smith and James Cutler. Four-foot granite walls hold cantilevered stone benches inscribed with each of the 20 victims' names, execution dates, and methods. Dedicated in 1992 by Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel; free public access.
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St. Peter's Church Historic Presentations and Tours
★ 4.724 St Peter St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
St. Peter's Church at 24 St. Peter Street stages historic presentations and tours covering 300+ years of Salem history, including 'The Making of a Witch' — the story of an Anglican founder accused during the witch trials — plus Revolutionary War-era stories tied to the parish.
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The Burying Point
★ 4.551 Charter St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Burying Point is Salem's oldest cemetery, founded in 1637 — final resting place of judges from the 1692 trials and other notable historical Salem figures. The Charter Street Cemetery Welcome Center next door at 51 Charter Street offers context.
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The House of the Seven Gables
★ 4.6115 Derby St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The House of the Seven Gables is a 1668 Salem Harbor mansion built by merchant John Turner, made famous as the setting of Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1851 novel. Caroline Emmerton restored it as a museum and immigrant settlement house in 1910. The 2-acre seaside campus is a National Historic Landmark District (2007), with mansion tours, grounds passes, and 3,000+ artworks and artifacts.
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The Pickering House
★ 4.8The Pickering House, 18 Broad St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Pickering House at 18 Broad Street is one of Salem's oldest surviving buildings, owned by the same family for 365+ years — built as a two-room frontier farmhouse in 1660, expanded into a Gothic Revival mansion by 1841, and renovated in the mid-1900s. Now a living museum operated by the Pickering Foundation, with tours and community programming.
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The Revere Bell
★ 4.8Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Revere Bell is a Paul Revere-cast bell historically tied to Salem, displayed as a small public history marker.
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The Witch House at Salem
★ 4.4310 Essex St, Salem, MA 01970, USA
The Witch House at 310½ Essex Street was the home of Witch Trials Judge Jonathan Corwin and is the only standing structure in Salem with direct ties to the 1692 trials. Visitors tour the colonial-era home self-guided or guided, with period furnishings throughout.