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Salem City Heritage Trails
Historic Salem New Jersey is the oldest permanent
English-speaking settlement in the Delaware Valley.
John Fenwick, an English Quaker, brought the first colonists to
this place in 1675, initiating settlement of West Jersey, the first
Quaker colony in North America. He named his colony
“Salem,” meaning “peace,” and laid out the first streets of “New
Salem”: Bridge, Fenwick and Wharf Streets, today known as
Market Street and East and West Broadway. Salem City remains
the county seat of Salem County, and its streetscapes reflect the
history of this people and place. Both Broadway and Market
Street are listed as historic districts on the New Jersey State and
National Registers of Historic Places.
All of Salem’s Heritage Trails begin at the OLD
SALEM COUNTY COURTHOUSE, located at
the corner of East Broadway and Market Street. John
Fenwick laid out the first Courthouse lot himself, and the
courthouse and jail were constructed on this site by
1692. The first part of the present brick structure was
built in 1735, using brick made right here in Salem
County.
Indeed, most of the brick used in Salem’s early buildings
was manufactured locally. The building was enlarged in
1817. At that time, the front door faced Market St. and the
county jail occupied the corner of Market and Broadway. After
the old jail building was removed, the Courthouse was again
enlarged and remodeled in the Colonial Revival style
(1908). At that time the entrance was moved to face
Broadway, and the old entrance replaced with a Palladian
window. Throughout these renovations, the distinctive bell
tower remained virtually unchanged and the original bell is
displayed in the courtroom. Among the many stirring
events that took place here, none perhaps are more
compelling than the treason trials of 1778.
Local Patriots indicted and tried neighbors
suspected of aiding the British during the
Salem Raid in February and March of that
same year. Four men were condemned to
death for crimes of high treason; however,
they were all pardoned by Governor
William Livingston and exiled from New
Jersey.
For more information, please Contact Us
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West Broadway Trail Brochure[PDF Format]
East Broadway Trail Brochure : [PDF Format]
Market Street Trail Brochure : [PDF Format]
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