The town's restored and reconstructed buildings, staffed by living-history interpreters, present visitors with a view of Moravian life in the 18th and 19th centuries. The features include skilled interpreters such as
tinsmiths,
blacksmiths,
cobblers,
gunsmiths,
bakers and
carpenters, practicing their trades while interacting with visitors. Approximately 70% of the buildings in the historic district are original.
Points of interest The village is centered around
Salem Square, which is bounded by Academy Street to the north, Church Street to the east, West Street to the south and Main Street to the west.
Salem College overlooks the square from Church Street.
Church Street , Church Street • African Moravian Log Church • Anna Johanna Vogler House • Dr.
Samuel Vierling House and Barn (The Doctor's House) •
Home Moravian Church • Moravian Church Archives • Philip Reich House • Philip Reich Shop • Salem College • Single Sisters' House Museum • St. Philip's Heritage Center •
St. Philip's Moravian Church Academy Street • Boys' School • Inspectors' House • Single Brothers' Workshop
Main Street , Main Street , Main Street • Augustus T. Zevely Inn • Bank of Cape Fear • Beitel-Van Vleck House • Belo House • Blum House • Butner House •
C. Winkler Bakery • Charles A. Copper House • Charles A. Copper Shop • Christoph Vogler House • Community Store • Dr. John Francis Shaffner House • Eberhardt House and Shop • Ebert-Reich House • Fifth House • First House • Fourth House • Gottlieb Schroeter House and Wash-Bake House • Hall House • Herbst House • Jacob Siewers House • John Siewers House • John Vogler House • Kuehln House • Lick–Leinbach House, Granary and Stable • Levering House • Market–Fire Engine House • Miksch Tobacco Shop • Nathaniel Shober Siewers House •
Salem Tavern • Salem Tavern Museum • Shultz House and Shop • Shultz Shoemaker Shop •
Single Brothers' House • Tavern Meadow • The Butner Shop • Theophilus Vierling House • Third House • Timothy Vogler Gunsmith Shop • Timothy Vogler House • Traugott Bagge Merchant • Traugott Leinbach House and Leinbach Wash-Bake House • Volz House • Vorsteher's House
West Street • Anna Catherina House • Traugott Bagge House
Salt Street • Christman House • Denke House • Family Gardens • Fruit Orchard • Hagen House • Jacob Christman House • Lick-Boner House • Miksch Gardens • Salt-Flax House • Solomon Lick House •
Christian Triebel Lot Garden Highlights of the town include the Salem Tavern, where
George Washington spent two nights (May 31 and June 1, 1791) while passing through North Carolina during his "Southern Tour"; the Single Brothers' House; Boys' School; C. Winkler Bakery; and a host of restored homes and shops and several stores including Traugott Bagge Merchant and the Moravian Book and Gift Shop. Of note is the St. Philip's Moravian Church complex. The site of
God's Acre, an 18th-century graveyard, the (now reconstructed) 1823 'Negro Church' was built following a congregational vote to segregate worship in accordance with North Carolina state law in 1816. Before that the
African-Americans who joined the Moravian church attended Home Moravian Church. In 1861, St. Philip's Church was constructed. Now restored, the church was originally built by the Salem congregation for the
enslaved and free African-Americans of the community. Completed just before the Civil War in 1861, it is the oldest surviving African-American church built for that purpose in North Carolina. The
Emancipation Proclamation was read there to the congregation in 1865 by the chaplain of the 10th Ohio Regiment. The church continued to grow and was expanded in the 1890s. The congregation moved to a new location in 1952 then a third location on Bon Aire Avenue, before returning to hold services in the brick Church in 2019. The building stood vacant from 1952 until its restoration. St. Philip's Church is individually listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Partially in the Old Salem historic district is the campus of
Salem College and Academy, with Main Hall, the Single Sisters' House, the Inspectors House (with the president's office and the college book store) on the Square and Gramley Library just down Church Street. Home Moravian Church, while not a part of the official Old Salem tour per se, this functioning congregation opens its
sanctuary to visitors on a regular schedule. Still owned by the Salem Congregation, Salem Square, in the center of the district, hosts many special events throughout the year. In Salem, the "Easter City," the traditional Moravian Easter
sunrise service has been held annually since 1772 by the Salem Congregation, and draws several thousand people to the Salem Square and Moravian graveyard. The first two weeks of December play host to the Candle Tea, an annual fundraiser for local charities held by the Home Moravian Church Women's Fellowship in the Single Brothers' House. The Market–Fire Engine House was constructed in 1803 (reconstructed in 1955). Half of it was used as a marketplace for fresh meat, and the other half was used to store fire fighting equipment. The town had been using this equipment since 1785, when the Salem Tavern was destroyed by fire. The fire company is thought to be the first of its kind in North Carolina. At the north end of the historic district is a large
Coffee Pot which is a former tin-shop sign, moved when
Interstate 40 was built just to the north.
Visitor Center Old Salem's Visitor Center was built in 2003 and is the main location where museum visitors purchase tickets. The building features a large concourse along a serpentine glass wall with interpretive panels about the history of Wachovia and Salem. The preliminary design was developed by
Venturi Scott Brown and Associates, with local firm Calloway, Johnson, Moore and West completing the project. The building also houses a food service, gift shops and the James A. Gray Jr. Auditorium. The Gray Auditorium is home to the 1800
Tannenberg Organ. The former 1964 visitor center and parking lot were demolished to allow partial reconstruction of the 18th-century Single Brothers' Garden.
Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts A part of Old Salem Museums & Gardens and located in a modern building in the historic district, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) is dedicated to exhibiting and researching the regional decorative arts of the early South. MESDA opened to the public on January 5, 1965. MESDA was founded by
Frank L. Horton and his mother Theodosia “Theo” L. Taliaferro, antiques dealers and collectors who spent most of their lives raising awareness of and appreciating domestic objects made in the south. In its galleries, MESDA showcases the architecture, needlework,
furniture,
paintings,
textiles,
ceramics,
silver and other
metalwares made and used in
Maryland,
Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia,
Kentucky and
Tennessee through the early 19th century. The majority of the MESDA collection is accessible online. == Notable people ==