, founder of Salem
Naumkeag Native Americans lived in northeastern Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to
European colonization of the Americas. The peninsula that would become Salem was known as
Naumkeag (alternate spellings Naemkeck, Nahumkek, Neumkeage) by the Native people who lived there at the time of contact in the early 1600s. Naumkeag was a major settlement for the Indigenous group that controlled territory from the
Merrimack to the
Mystic rivers. The English and other Europeans referred to them as the
Naumkeag people. There are probable Indigenous settlement sites near the mouths of the North, South, and Forest rivers in Salem. The contact period was a disastrous time for the Naumkeag. Many Naumkeag died in a war with the
Tarrantine and as a result of a
smallpox epidemic in 1617–1619, including their powerful sachem
Nanepashemet. The disease had probably been contracted by members who came into contact with European fishermen or explorers. Their strength was reduced just prior to the arrival of English settlers in 1626 to what became modern-day Salem. In 1633, a second smallpox epidemic struck, killing two of Nanepashemet's successors,
Montowompate and
Wonohaquaham, and leaving his remaining heir
Wenepoykin scarred. So it was that English settlers met little resistance on their arrival in Salem. Although
Wenepoykin would join
Metacomet in
King Philip's War in 1675, the English settlers at this point had the numerical superiority to defeat Metacomet's Indigenous coalition. It was not until 1686, when the
Massachusetts Bay Colony Charter was recalled by
King James II in the creation of the
Dominion of New England that Wenepoykin's heirs pressed their claim to the land of Salem, for which they were paid twenty pounds. arrived from
Cape Ann led by
Roger Conant. Conant's leadership provided the stability for the settlers to survive the first two years, but
John Endecott replaced him by order of the
Massachusetts Bay Company. Conant stepped aside and was granted of land in compensation. These "New Planters" and the "Old Planters" agreed to cooperate because of the diplomacy of Conant and Endecott. To recognize this peaceful transition to the new government, the name of the settlement was changed to Salem, the
hellenized name of
Shalem (שָׁלֵם), the royal city of
Melchizedek, which is identified with
Jerusalem. In 1628, Endecott ordered that the
Great House be moved from Cape Ann, reassembling it on Washington Street north of Church Street.
Francis Higginson wrote that "we found a faire house newly built 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 elected Governor in late 1629, and arrived with the
Winthrop Fleet in 1630, one of the many events that began the
Puritan Great Migration. In 1639, Endecott, among others, signed the building contract for enlarging the meeting house in Town House Square for the first church in Salem. This document remains part of the town records at City Hall. He was active in the affairs of the town throughout his life.
Samuel Skelton was the first pastor of the
First Church of Salem, which is the original Puritan church in America. Endecott already had a close relationship with Skelton, having been converted by him, and Endecott considered him as his spiritual father.
Salem's harbor was defended by
Fort Miller in
Marblehead from 1632 to 1865, and by
Fort Pickering on
Winter Island from 1643 to 1865. During the 17th and 18th centuries, Salem was involved in the
Atlantic slave trade, surpassing
Boston in terms of the town's engagement with the
triangular trade. Beginning in 1701 there was a steady political and social effort in Massachusetts to end slavery and by 1770 the practice was all but eliminated, with many slaves winning their freedom. In 1768,
Samuel Hall established Salem's first print shop and founded
The Essex Gazette Salem's first newspaper, and the third to emerge in Massachusetts.
Witchcraft Trials One of the most widely known aspects of Salem is its history of witchcraft allegations, which started with
Abigail Williams,
Betty Parris, and their friends playing
"with a Venus glase & an Egg" to learn
"what trade their sweet harts should be of." The infamous Salem witch trials began in 1692, and 19 people were executed by hanging because of the false accusations;
Giles Corey was
pressed to death for refusing to plead innocent or guilty, thus avoiding the noose and instead dying an innocent man. Salem is also significant in legal history as the site of the
Dorothy Talbye Trial, where a mentally ill woman was hanged for murdering her daughter because Massachusetts made no distinction at the time between insanity and criminal behavior. His son Judge
John Hathorne came to prominence in the late 17th century when witchcraft was a serious felony. Judge Hathorne is the best known of the witch trial judges, and he became known as the "Hanging Judge" for sentencing accused witches to death.
American Revolution On February 26, 1775,
patriots raised the drawbridge at the North River on North Street, preventing British Colonel
Alexander Leslie and his 300 troops of the
64th Regiment of Foot from seizing stores and ammunition hidden in North Salem. Both parties came to an agreement and no blood was shed that day, but war broke out at
Lexington and Concord soon after. A group of prominent merchants with ties to Salem published a statement retracting what some interpreted as
Loyalist leanings and professing their dedication to the American cause, including Francis Cabot, William Pynchon, Thomas Barnard, E. A. Holyoke, and William Pickman. , 1853,
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston During the
American Revolutionary War, the town became a center for privateering. The documentation is incomplete, but about 1,700
Letters of Marque were granted during that time, issued on a per-voyage basis. Nearly 800 vessels were commissioned as privateers and are credited with capturing or destroying about 600 British ships. Privateering resumed during the
War of 1812.
Trade with the Pacific and Africa Following the
American Revolution, many ships used as privateers were too large for short voyages in the coasting trade, and their owners determined to open new avenues of trade to distant countries. The young men of the town, fresh from service on the armed ships of Salem, were eager to embark in such ventures. Captain Nathaniel Silsbee, his first mate Charles Derby, and second mate Richard J. Cleveland were not yet twenty years old when they set sail on a nineteen-month voyage that was perhaps the first from the newly independent America to the
East Indies. In 1795, Captain Jonathan Carnes set sail for
Sumatra in the
Malay Archipelago on his secret voyage for
pepper. Nothing was heard from him until eighteen months later, when he entered Salem harbor with a cargo of pepper in bulk, the first to be so imported into the country, and which sold at the extraordinary profit of seven hundred per cent. The
Empress of China, formerly a privateer, was refitted as the first American ship to sail from
New York to
China. By 1790, Salem had become the sixth-largest city in the country, and a world-famous
seaport—particularly in the
China Trade. It had a large cod fishing industry, conducted off the Newfoundland Banks. It exported
codfish to Europe and the
West Indies, imported
sugar and
molasses from the
West Indies,
tea from China, and products depicted on the city seal from the
East Indies—in particular Sumatran pepper. Salem ships also visited
Africa in the slave trade—
Zanzibar in particular. They also traveled to
Russia,
Japan, and
Australia. . Ropes, a mute, was the son of a sea captain and the nephew of prominent Salem ship owner
Jerathmiel Peirce. This painting is in the collection of the
Peabody Essex Museum. The sail frigate was built at one of
Enos Briggs's shipyards on
Winter Island in 1799. The neutrality of the United States was tested during the
Napoleonic Wars. After the
Chesapeake–Leopard affair, Congress passed the
Embargo Act of 1807.
President Thomas Jefferson closed all ports, an economic blow to the seaport town of Salem. The embargo was the starting point on the path to the
War of 1812. Both the
United Kingdom and
France imposed trade restrictions to weaken each other's economies. This disrupted American trade and tested the United States' neutrality.
Royal Navy ships frequently interdicted U.S. merchant ships trading with France and seized their goods, and at times would
impress American sailors. Salem had established trade relations with merchants in distant lands, which were a source of livelihood and prosperity for many. Charles Endicott,
master of Salem merchantman
Friendship, returned in 1831 to report native Sumatran people had plundered his ship,
murdering the first officer and two crewmen. Following public outcry, President
Andrew Jackson ordered the
Potomac on the
First Sumatran Expedition, which departed
New York City on August 19, 1831. In another direction, diplomat
Edmund Roberts negotiated a treaty with
Said bin Sultan, Sultan of Muscat and Oman on September 21, 1833. In 1837, the sultan moved his main place of residence to
Zanzibar and welcomed Richard Waters, a resident of Salem, as a
United States consul of the early years. and adopted a city seal in 1839 with the motto "
Divitis Indiae usque ad ultimum sinum",
Latin for "To the farthest point of the rich East."
Nathaniel Hawthorne was overseer of Salem's port from 1846 until 1849. He worked in the U.S. Custom House across the street from the port near Pickering Wharf, his setting for the beginning of
The Scarlet Letter. In 1858, an
amusement park was established at Juniper Point, a peninsula jutting into the harbor. Prosperity left the city with a wealth of fine architecture, including
Federal-style mansions designed by one of America's first
architects, Samuel McIntire, for whom the city's largest historic district is named. These homes and mansions now make up the greatest concentrations of notable pre-1900 domestic structures in the United States. Shipping declined throughout the 19th century.
Boston and
New York City eclipsed Salem and its
silting harbor. Consequently, the city turned to manufacturing. Industries included
tanneries, shoe factories, and the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company. The
Great Salem Fire of 1914 destroyed over 400 homes and left 3,500 families homeless but spared the historic concentration of Federal architecture on Chestnut Street. A memorial plaque on a drugstore building marks the former site of the Korn Leather Factory, which burned in the fire.
Air Station and the National Guard Coast Guard Air Station Salem was established on February 15, 1935, when the
United States Coast Guard opened a new
seaplane facility in Salem because there was no space to expand the
Gloucester Air Station at Ten Pound Island.
Coast Guard Air Station Salem was located on
Winter Island, an extension of
Salem Neck which juts out into
Salem Harbor.
Search and rescue, hunting for
derelicts, and
medical evacuations were the station's primary areas of responsibility. During its first year of operation, Salem crews performed 26 medical evacuations. They flew in all kinds of weather, and the radio direction capabilities of the aircraft were of significant value in locating vessels in distress. During
World War II (1939–1945), air crews from Salem flew
neutrality patrols along the coast, and the Air Station roster grew to 37 aircraft.
Anti-submarine patrols flew regularly. In October 1944, Air Station Salem was designated as the first
Air-Sea Rescue station on the eastern seaboard. The
Martin PBM Mariner, a hold-over from the war, became the primary rescue aircraft. In the mid-1950s,
helicopters came, as did
Grumman HU-16 Albatross amphibious
flying boats (UFs). The air station's missions included search and rescue, law enforcement, counting migratory waterfowl for the U.S. Biological Survey, and assisting icebound islands by delivering provisions. 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 variety of take-off headings irrespective of wind direction unless there was a strong steady wind from the east. This produced enormous waves that swept into the mouth of the harbor and hampered water operations. When the seadrome was too rough, returning amphibian aircraft used the
Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Beverly. Salem Air Station moved to
Cape Cod in 1970. In 2011, the City of Salem completed plans for the Winter Island Park and squared off against residents who are against bringing two power-generating windmills to the tip of Winter Island. The Renewable Energy Task Force, along with the Energy and Sustainability Manager, Paul Marquis, have recommended the construction 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. The 30-acre park has been open to the public since the early 1970s. In 2011, a master plan was developed 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 money. In the long term, the projected cost to rehabilitate just the barracks was $1.5 million. But in the short term, there are multiple lower-cost items, like a proposed $15,000 kayak dock or $50,000 to relocate and improve the bathhouse. This is a very important project since Fort Pickering guarded Salem Harbor as far back as the 17th century.
National Guard birthplace and architecture 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. In 1637, the General Court of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony ordered the organization of the Colony's militia companies into the North, South and East Regiments. The colonists adopted the English militia system, which obligated men between the ages of 16 and 60 to own arms and take part in the community's defense. Each April, the Second Corps of Cadets gather in front of St. Peter's Episcopal Church, where the
body of their founder, Stephen Abbott, is buried. They lay a wreath, play "
Taps" and fire a
21-gun salute. In another annual commemoration, soldiers gather at Old Salem Armory to honor soldiers who were
killed in the
Battles of Lexington and Concord. On April 14, 2012, Salem celebrated the 375th anniversary of the first muster on Salem Common, with more than 1,000 troops taking part in ceremonies and a parade.
Samuel McIntire was one of the first architects in the United States, and his work is a prime example of early
Federal-style architecture. The
Samuel McIntire Historic District is one of the largest concentrations of 17th and 18th century domestic structures in America. It includes McIntire commissions such as the
Peirce-Nichols House and
Hamilton Hall.
The Witch House or Jonathan Corwin House () is also located in the district. Samuel McIntire's house and workshop were located at 31 Summer Street in what is now the Samuel
McIntire Historic District. ==Geography==