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== History == === Pre-incorporation === The area was originally inhabited by the [[Mohegan people]]. The first settlement of [[Europe]]an origin in present-day Salem (then part of the town of [[Montville, Connecticut|Montville]]) was deeded in 1664. The settlers were of [[England|English]] origin. In the early 18th century, more settlements appeared in what was then [[Colchester, Connecticut|Colchester]]. During this time period, the area was called "Paugwonk". The small neighborhood around the Gardner Lake Firehouse on [[Connecticut Route 354|Route 354]] is sometimes still referred to by that name. Because of the remote location of these settlements and the considerable distance to [[church (building)|churches]], the people petitioned the Connecticut General Court for a new parish in 1725. It was named New Salem Parish, in honor of Colonel Samuel Browne, the largest landowner at the time, who was from [[Salem, Massachusetts]]. Recent archaeological evidence suggests that Colonel Browne owned [[Slavery in the colonial United States|slave]]s and operated one of the largest slave plantations in New England. The people of New Salem strongly supported the [[Patriot (American Revolution)|Patriot]] cause in the [[American Revolution|Revolution]]. Salem was the first town in the state of Connecticut to have a plantation, owned by the Browne family. ===1819 to the present=== Salem was incorporated as a [[New England town|town]] in 1819 from lands of Colchester, [[Lyme, Connecticut|Lyme]], and Montville.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Connecticut Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qoEyAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA334|year=1903|publisher=Connecticut Magazine Company|page=334}}</ref> The rocky and craggy land that constituted much of the town kept the population low and new settlement at a minimum. Salem has always been a crossroads town; the old Hartford and New London Turnpike (now [[Connecticut Route 85|Route 85]]) was a [[toll road]], traveled frequently by legislators during the winters of the 19th century when the [[Connecticut River]] was impassable. The Turnpike provided stage coach service until the 1890s. ====Music Vale Seminary==== Salem became a well-known location upon the founding of [[Oramel Whittlesey]]'s [[Music Vale Seminary]] in 1835. Students of the school not only learned music, but also provided self-sustenance through farming, as did most Salem households at the time. Pianos were manufactured up the Hartford and New London Turnpike about two miles (3 km) north from the seminary, at the present location of the firehouse and Maple Shade General Store. The seminary burned down and was rebuilt. However, when Whittlesey died in 1867, it was the beginning of the end for the school; when it burned down again shortly thereafter, it was never rebuilt. Today, all that remains of the seminary is a barn and a state historical marker. ====Early rural electrification in the United States==== Salem is the site of one of the first [[rural electrification]] projects in the country, at the farm of Frederick C. Rawolle Jr. Rawolle was an engineer from [[New York City|New York]] who retired at the age of 32 after he sold to a major manufacturer the patent rights of an explosive device he had invented to fracture [[oil well]]s. His [[net worth]] at this time was approximately $50,000,000, an enormous sum for the time period. He decided to settle in the remote woods of Salem and build a farm, purchasing {{convert|2800|acre|km2}} of land between 1917 and 1924, completely surrounding Mountain Lake and Fairy Lake. This land, once called Paugwonk, had been jointly owned by a [[Niantic people|Niantic]] sachem named Sanhop, a Mohegan named Chappattoe and another kinsman from Uncas. The combined area became known as Fairy Lake Farm, located near the lake of the same name. Carr Pond, which today supplies water to the city of [[New London, Connecticut|New London]], was created by Rawolle in 1920 from Fairy Lake as a means of docking his boat near the turnpike. Rawolle decided to generate his own electricity when he learned that bringing transmission lines to his farm from the city of New London, about {{convert|12|mi|km}} away, would be virtually impossible. At a cost of about one million dollars, extremely expensive at the time for a single project, a [[hydroelectricity|hydroelectric system]] was completed in 1922. Airplanes flying from New York to [[Boston]] used the glimmering lights of Fairy Lake Farm as guidance. Rawolle also opened a store in New London to sell produce from the farm. This endeavor collapsed, however, when the [[Wall Street Crash of 1929|stock market crashed in 1929]] and Rawolle lost all of his money. He died in 1954; the large stone mansion he lived in at the farm is still standing at the end of Horse Pond Road, though it is abandoned. ====Hiram Bingham III and IV==== [[Hiram Bingham III]], from Salem, was an adventurer, U.S. senator, and explorer who rediscovered [[Machu Picchu]] in Peru in 1911. He retrieved artifacts for [[Yale University]], which in 2011 returned many items to [[Cusco]], Peru, pursuant to an agreement with the [[Peru]]vian government. His son, [[Hiram Bingham IV]], was the Vice Consul in [[Marseille]], France, during [[World War II]], and rescued thousands of [[Jews]] from death at the [[Nazi concentration camps]]. Much of the Bingham family still lives in Salem and is active in town politics and local issues. Hiram IV died in 1988, and a [[postage stamp|U.S. Postal Stamp]] was issued in his honor on May 30, 2006. In 2011 the Simon Wiesenthal Center produced a film tribute to Hiram ("Harry") Bingham IV concerning his life-saving actions during the war.<ref>"More than 450 supporters of the Simon Wiesenthal Center gathered for the 2011 Humanitarian Award Dinner. The Medal of Valor was awarded posthumously to Sir Winston Churchill, Hiram Bingham IV, and Pope John Paul II...." ''Wall Street Journal'', March 30, 2011</ref> ===Salem today=== Over the decades, Salem has slowly progressed from a small and remote farming town to a [[bedroom community]] of about 4,000; in the 1990s, it was one of the fastest growing [[municipality|municipalities]] in the state. However, it is still a small town by Connecticut standards. It did not even have its own [[ZIP code]] until the mid-1990s; before then, it was shared with Colchester. During its early years, Salem had several schoolhouses scattered throughout town, like most [[New England]] communities of the time; one is still visible on White Birch Road. Salem School was built in 1940 near the [[village green|town green]] as little more than a large schoolhouse. Several additions have been built since then, the most recent opening in 1994. Today, Salem School is one of the largest Kβ8 schools in the state, with about 600 students. Students in grades 9 through 12 attend high school in the neighboring town of [[East Lyme, Connecticut|East Lyme]]; this will be the case until at least 2039<ref>{{cite web |title=Salem, EL agree to new 20-year high school agreement |url=https://www.theday.com/local-news/20160516/salem-el-agree-to-new-20-year-high-school-agreement/ |website=The Day |publisher=The Day Publishing Company |access-date=December 26, 2022}}</ref> , when the current co-op agreement between the two towns expires. [[Connecticut Route 85]] was commissioned from the old turnpike in 1932. Traffic increased considerably over the next several decades, and the [[Connecticut Route 11|Route 11]] [[controlled-access highway|expressway]] was proposed as an alternate through route. Lack of funding and bureaucratic issues caused construction to halt in 1972 in Salem at [[Connecticut Route 82|Route 82]]. The project was revived in the mid-1990s, and in August 2004, Route 11 was announced as a federal high priority project under [[George W. Bush|President Bush]]'s [[Executive Order 13274]], during a surprise visit by [[U.S. Transportation Secretary]] [[Norman Mineta]] to Salem. The new highway was to be accompanied by a [[Greenway (landscape)|"greenway"]] of preserved land, a first in the nation. However, the State of Connecticut halted work on the project in 2009, citing funding issues. Most Salem residents favor completion because it would remove through traffic from local roads. Though effectively canceled, the highway project remains a frequently discussed political issue in the town. Salem has very little commercial and industrial development, which has not kept pace with the rapid residential growth; the "four corners" area, at the busy junction of Route 85 and Route 82, is virtually all that exists. As a result, taxes in the town are generally high. The last operating dairy farm in Salem, near Gardner Lake, which was an official supplier of [[Cabot Creamery|Cabot]] cheese, closed in 2004, though there remains a small dairy goat farm, Syman Says Farms, that produces goat milk bath and body products. In 2006 Salem [[Boy Scouts of America|Boy Scout]] Troop 123 was one of the largest in the state of Connecticut. In 2006 this troop sent more scouts to summer camp than any other Connecticut troop. Most years more than 50 percent of second grade boys are enrolled in the Salem Cub Scouts. ===Salem traditions=== Salem is host to several long-standing traditions. Some annual traditions include: *Memorial Day Parade *Salem 5K Road Race *Salem Apple Festival, held at the end of October on the town green. It features everything from apple pies to apple fritters to hot dogs with apple sauerkraut. Today we also sell pies and apple merchandise across the street from the town Green. In concert with the festival, the Salem Public Library holds its annual book sale at Salem School.
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