
The first Moravians in North Carolina settled here 250 years ago on 100,000 acres, known as Wachovia Tract. These German-speaking Protestants established the first colonial town in the Carolina Piedmont in an area known today as Historic
Bethabara Park. Intended to be a temporary settlement from which the town of Salem and farming communities would be developed, Bethabara continued long after Salem was established. It consists of the 1788 church, reconstructed palisade fort and historic community and medicinal gardens; it is a National Historic Landmark. Guides in costumes offer tours. The archeological remains are intact and have contributed to a significant understanding of our Moravian culture, in particular the manufacture of Moravian pottery. Nearby Bethania, the second settlement, is a National Historic District. Also, see our past up close and person by checking out www.digitalforsyth.org.

Founded in
1766 to house professional Moravian craftsmen,
Salem, a congregational town and trading center,
was a haven for entrepreneurs. Now known as Old
Salem Museums & Gardens,
it is one of America's most authentic and
well-documented colonial sites with 100 restored
and reconstructed buildings. The new Old
Salem Visitor Center serves as an orientation
area, as well as gateway to the historic
district. Ticketed visitors learn from costumed
interpreters the household
activities of European and African Americans
who resided here through 1840. Skilled trades
such as pewtering, pottery making, woodworking,
shoemaking and tailoring are demonstrated.
Be sure to visit the gardens of Old Salem
described by Rudy Faveretti as the "best
documented historic landscape in the United
States." Two National
Historic Landmarks are here, the Single Brothers'
House and Salem Tavern.
Old Salem's newest restoration
projects include:
St. Philips Moravian Church, built in 1861, is the oldest standing African American church in North Carolina. Adjacent to it is the newly reconstructed 1823 log church, where interpretations of the African American experience in Salem are available. The newly restored St. Philips Church opened in May 2003.
The Herbst House, built in 1821, was
recently moved to its original street-front
location.
The Timothy Vogler Gunsmith Shop, built in 1831 and operated by father and son, is a fully operational gunsmithing facility. It is one of the oldest remaining gunsmith shops in America.
Other highlights include:
Salem Academy & College began in 1772 as a Moravian school for girls. Today it is the 13th oldest college in the nation, as well as the oldest dedicated to the education of women.
Winkler Bakery, established in 1800, still bakes their famous Moravian sugarcake, breads and sugar cookies daily and serves them hot from the wood-fired oven.
The Museum
of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA), housed in Old Salem,
is the only museum dedicated to exhibiting and researching the original
decorative arts of America's early South. Guided tours of the 24
period rooms and seven galleries are offered and showcase the furniture,
paintings, textiles, ceramics and metalwares made and used in Georgia,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland, Virginia and the Carolinas through
1820.

African American residents have played a significant role in developing Winston-Salem. Simon Green Atkins conceived the idea of Slater Industrial Academy, which is today Winston-Salem State University. Our African American Historical & Cultural Guide focuses on the heritage, culture and artistic accomplishments represented by the National Black Theatre Festival, the Delta Arts Center and Diggs Gallery. One hundred years of African American church history is retold in the guide.
Named to the National Register of Historic Places, Reynolda
House, Museum of American Art is
the former home of tobacco baron R.J. and
Katharine Smith Reynolds. Built between 1912
and 1917, it exhibits one of the finest
public collections of American art in the
South. The pieces
date from 1755 to present and include works
by Jacob Lawrence, Jasper Johns, Frederic
Church, Thomas Eakins and Georgia O'Keeffe.
Reynolda House showcases one of America's
most authentic examples of a gracious country
estate of its time.
View period fashions within a display of the Reynolds' collection. Three rooms in the attic are devoted to the exhibition of vintage clothing, accessories and toys belonging to members of the Reynolds family from 1889 to the 1960s. Mrs. Reynolds' hats, shoes and gowns (1905-24) comprise the major portion of the collection.
The main gallery of the Mary and Charlie Babcock Wing hosts major traveling exhibitions organized by museums and universities around the country, as well as exhibitions that bring together loans from other museums displayed with works from the Reynolda House collection. The Babcock Wing also provides a visitor orientation area, auditorium space for concerts, lectures, and plays, and a museum store offering books, posters, jewelry, children’s games and books, and decorative accessories.
The Hauser Farm began in 1830 as a huge
tract of land owned by the Hauser family until
the late 1950s. In 1987, more than 100 acres of
the family's original land was transferred
to the state of North Carolina and became Horne
Creek Living Historical Farm. Thought to be one of the best preserved
examples of a 19th century middle-class farm, it
has been developed to demonstrate what life was
like in the northwestern Piedmont in
the early 1900s, specifically during the transition
from fruit to tobacco crops. Programs include white
oak basket making workshops,
the Corn Shucking Frolic, traditional log construction
techniques, and demonstrations on cutting grass
with a scythe and making lye
soap.
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