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81 Cabot St
Beverly, MA (1.5 miles)
1 Bed, 1 Bath
Condominium
337 sq.ft.
14 Gregg St
Beverly, MA (2.0 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath
Home
1169 sq.ft.
13r Main St
Peabody, MA (2.1 miles)
1+ Bath
Commercial
2000 sq.ft.
Spacious And Cost Efficient
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15 Ayer St
Peabody, MA (2.1 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath
Home
1800 sq.ft.
30 Photos
15 Prospect Street
Beverly, MA (2.2 miles)
5 Bed, 3 Bath
Duplex
2484 sq.ft.
3 baths, 3 kitchens, 2 private back yards, 2 sheds...hot tub...granite in kitchen and abundant
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Po Box 4320
Peabody, MA (2.2 miles)
2 Bed, 1 Bath
Mobile or Manufactured
Move Right In to This Completely Renovated Colonial!
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1 Angenica Ter
Marblehead, MA (2.3 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
4200 sq.ft.
Move right in to this COMPLETELY UPDATED four bedroom Colonial in desirable Clifton location.
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11 Photos
16 Countryside Ln
Marblehead, MA (2.4 miles)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
2229 sq.ft.
Four bedroom 2 and 1/2 bath single family home on beautiful tree lined street one mile from beach.
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18 Photos
6 Ethel Ave
Peabody, MA (2.5 miles)
4 Bed, 1+ Bath
Home
1768 sq.ft.
Emerson Park-Charming 4 Bedroom Colonial with large updated gourmet kitchen with granite counter.
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Local city information for Salem, MA
Salem is a city in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 40,407 at the 2000 census. It and Lawrence are the county seats of Essex County. Home to Salem State College, the Salem Willows Park and the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem is a residential and tourist area which includes the neighborhoods of Salem Neck, The Point, South Salem and North Salem, Witchcraft Heights, and the McIntire Historic District (named after Salem's famous architect and carver, Samuel McIntire).
Salem was one of the most significant seaports in early America. It has the first National Historic Site designated by Congress, Salem Maritime National Historic Site, which protects Salem's historic waterfront.
Tourists know Salem as a mix of important historical sites, New Age and Wiccan boutiques, and kitschy Halloween or witch-themed attractions. The most recent (and controversial) addition of significance is a bronze statue of the Samantha Stephens character (played by actress Elizabeth Montgomery) of the
Bewitched television program in Salem's Lappin Park on June 15, 2005.
Featured notably in Arthur Miller's
The Crucible, much of the city's culture is reflective of its role as the location of the Salem Witch Trials of 1692: Police cars are adorned with witch logos, a local public school is known as the Witchcraft Heights Elementary School, the Salem High School football team is named The Witches, and Gallows Hill, a site of numerous public hangings, is currently used as a playing field for various sports.
Salem was founded at the mouth of the Naumkeag River in 1626 (it was originally called Naumkeag and was renamed Salem three years later) by a company of fishermen from Cape Ann led by Roger Conant, and incorporated in 1629. The name "Salem" is related to the Hebrew word "shalom" and Arabic word "salam", both meaning "peace". Salem is also the original name of Jerusalem used in Genesis 14:18. Conant was later supplanted by John Endecott, the governor assigned by the Massachusetts Bay Company.
In 1627 a patent was solicited from England and it was obtained by a group led by John Endicott who arrived in Naumkeag in 1628. Endicott and the other settlers of the New England Company now owned the rights to Naumkeag. Fortunately for the peaceful continuity of the settlement, Conant remained in Salem and, despite what must have been a disappointment for him, acceded to Endicott's authority as the new governor.
Conant built the first Salem house on what is Essex Street today, almost opposite the Town Market. In 1639, his was one of the signatures on 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. In 1679, he died at the age of 87. Salem originally included much of the North Shore, including Marblehead. Most of the accused in the Salem witch trials lived in nearby 'Salem Village', although a few lived on the outskirts, now known as Danvers. Salem Village also included Peabody and parts of present-day Beverly. Middleton, Topsfield, Wenham and Manchester-by-the-Sea, too, were once parts of Salem. 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 glass and egg. Salem achieved further legal notoriety as the site of the Dorothy Talbye trial, where a mentally ill woman was hanged for murdering her daughter, because at the time the Massachusetts common law made no distinction 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 from seizing stores and ammunition hidden in North Salem. A few months later, in May 1775, a group of prominent merchants with ties to Salem, including Francis Cabot, William Pynchon, Thomas Barnard, E.A. Holyoke and William Pickman, felt the need to publish a statement retracting what some interpreted as Loyalist leanings and to profess their dedication to the Colonial cause.
During the Revolution, the town became a center for privateering. By 1790, Salem was the sixth largest city in the country, and a world famous seaport—particularly in the China trade. Codfish was exported to the West Indies and Europe. Sugar and molasses were imported from the West Indies, tea from China, and pepper from Sumatra. Salem ships also visited Africa, Russia, Japan and Australia. During the War of 1812, privateering resumed.
Prosperity would leave 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 collection of homes and mansions from Colonial America are now the greatest concentrations of notable pre-1900 domestic structures in the United States.
The wealth of architecture in Salem can be directly attributed to the Old China Trade, which was ongoing for years with America and Great Britain.
Incorporated as a city on March 23, 1836 , Salem adopted a city seal in 1839 with the motto "Divitis Indiae usque ad ultimum sinum", Latin for "To the farthest port of the rich Indies." Nathaniel Hawthorne was overseer of the port from 1846 until 1849. He worked in the Customs House near Pickering Wharf, his setting for the beginning of
The Scarlet Letter. In 1858, an amusement park was established at Salem Willows, a peninsula jutting into the harbor. It should be noted that up until the War of 1812, the port of Salem was the center of trade in America.
But shipping would decline through the 19th century. Salem and its silting harbor were increasingly eclipsed by Boston and New York. Consequently, the city turned to manufacturing. Industries included tanneries, shoe factories and the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company. More than 400 homes burned in the Great Salem Fire of 1914, leaving 3,500 families homeless from a blaze that began in the Korn Leather Factory. The fire ripped into one part of the city, but historical places including City Hall and the historic concentration of Federal architecture on Chestnut Street were spared; the fire left mostly all of Salem's architectural legacy intact, which helped it develop as a center for tourism.
Image:George Peabody House, Salem, MA.jpg|Peabody House, c. 1905
Image:Harbor from Salem Willows.jpg|Salem Harbor in 1907
Image:Lafayette Street, Salem, MA.jpg|Lafayette Street in 1910
Image:Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company.jpg|Naumkeag Mills, c. 1910
Image:Roger Williams house in Salem MA USA.jpg|Roger Williams House (or The Witch House) c. 1910
File:1791 sampler.jpg|Sampler (needlework) made in Salem in 1791. Art Institute of Chicago textile collection.
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