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==History== Salem was settled originally by [[Quakers]] with the intent that it be a community of Friends. In 1835 Aaron Street, while wending his way westward, came upon an uninhabited spot and declared "Now have mine eyes beheld a country teeming with every good thing…Hither will I come with my flocks and my herds, with my children and my children's children, and our city shall be called Salem, for thus was the city of our fathers, even near unto the seacoast."<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/quakersiowastor00jonegoog | title=The Quakers of Iowa | publisher=Clio Press | year=1914 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/quakersiowastor00jonegoog/page/n44 40]}}</ref> Independently another Quaker, Isaac Pigeon, who may have visited the spot before Street, brought his family to the area. They became the first citizens of Salem, and with Peter Boyer, began to recruit other Quakers to migrate westward to join them. As early as 1837, Friends meetings were held in private homes, and after the village was laid out in 1839 by Aaron Street Jr., and Peter Boyer, a meeting house was built.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/historyhenrycou00cogoog | title=The History of Henry County, Iowa: Containing a History of the County, Its Cities, Towns, &c | publisher=Western Historical Company | year=1879 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/historyhenrycou00cogoog/page/n532 536]}}</ref> From the early years members of other Christian denominations settled in Salem, so it was never an exclusively Quaker community. Being only twenty miles from the Missouri border, Salem became an important depot on the [[Underground Railroad]]. A prominent member of the [[abolitionism|abolitionists]] was [[Henderson Luelling|Henderson Lewelling]]. His house on West Main St. is listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] as an Underground Railroad station. The Friends, however, had a dispute over the issue of abolition. Agreed in their opposition to slavery, they disagreed on actively helping slaves escape. In 1846, 50 members of the community, including Lewelling, were disfellowshiped. In 1847, the Lewelling family traveled by covered wagon along the Oregon Trail along with a special covered wagon that had been designed to transport more than 700 young fruit and nut trees, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, quince, walnut, and hickory.<ref>History of Fruit Growing in the Pacific Northwest, Henderson Luelling and Seth Lewelling | url=http://www.ars-grin.gov/cor/cool/luelling.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924160448/http://www.ars-grin.gov/cor/cool/luelling.html |date=2015-09-24 }}</ref> The surviving trees became the parent stock of all of the early orchards in the Pacific Northwest. The Society of Friends also established a college in Salem. Whittier College, unrelated to the college of the same name in California, existed from 1868 to 1910.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/quakersiowastor00jonegoog | title=The Quakers of Iowa | publisher=Clio Press | year=1914 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/quakersiowastor00jonegoog/page/n246 242]}}</ref>
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