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History

SCNA History
The SCNA is one of Salem's oldest neighborhood associations. The Salem
Common Neighborhood is defined roughly as illustrated in the map below.

The Common Fence.
history courtesy of Alan Hanscom
"The Fence Around the Common" Sidney Perley's History of Salem
speaks of the Common before the 1800s. "The entire area was unenclosed,
and horses, cattle, duck, geese, hens, stray pigs and other animals roamed
at will." Another Salem historian, Joseph Felt, writes of it in 1845:
"Its surface now wears a very different aspect from what it did prior
to 1801. Then it had quite a rural appearance, having several ponds and
hillocks.... Towards the close of the year, last mentioned, a number of
our generously disposed inhabitants applied to the town for leave to have
it leveled at their own charge. The request was allowed. The work was
energetically advanced and well done the ensuing spring.... There were
elevations, on the premises, sufficient to fill the hollows.... At the
same time trees, chiefly poplar, were planted on each side of the walks,
which were taken up, 1817, and their places supplied by elms.
So changed, the Common was called, by order of the selectmen, 1802, Washington
Square. In 1805, contributions were made by individuals and the town,
for the erection of its eastern and western gates. Being designed, arched,
and ornamented by Mr. Samuel McIntire, a noted architect, they do much
to honor his taste.

The MacIntire Arch, an early daguerreotype
A contract was made, 1817, for a substantial railing to succeed the one
which had enclosed the mall. Thus altered, this portion of the Common
lands adds much to the worth and beauty of its environs. It confers an
obligation on this community, to remember the promoters of its improvements
with sentiments of esteem." (page 196-197 The Annals of Salem, volume I) In the Peabody-Essex museum hangs a painting
by George Ropes titled Salem Common on Training Day, 1808. The fence around
the Common in the painting appears to be made of whitewashed wooden rails.
And, indeed, in Webber and Nevins' Old Naumkeag it states that "the
whole was enclosed with a railing of oak [in 1801]." So if a new
fence was commissioned in 1817 to replace it (probably because of damage
sustained from the "great gale of 1815;" see below), George
Ropes' painting shows the first fence that was ever around the Common.
But is the "substantial railing," that replaced it in 1817,
the one we have now? No! The Salem Historic District Study Committee Report,
Vol. II (1967) states that the present iron fence was erected about the
same time the Western gate was taken down...in 1850 (page 155). And in
Old Naumkeag (published 1877) is an engraving that shows the iron gates
as they are today." In 1850 the present iron fence was substituted
for the wooden railing." (Osgood and Batchelder's Historical Sketch
of Salem, published 1879, page 32). By 1850 the "substantial railing" of 1817 had become rather insubstantial.
The weather damage was so great to the arches (built around 1805) and
the second railing (built 1817) that all of it had to be removed. The
Preservation Restriction, on file in the City Planner's office, states
that the McIntire carvings were given to the Essex Institute at that time
for safekeeping. In the present day, in the first floor meeting room of
the Peabody Essex Museum's Phillips Library, on the four walls, can be
seen most of these carved motifs, including the medallion of George Washington
that was on the western gate and another one that includes a depiction
of a Native American, presumably Naumkeag (the original Salem tribe).
" On Monday evening May 27, 1850 the City council appropriated $7,000
for the erection of a substantial iron fence around Washington Square.
The new fence including the gateways was erected under the direction of
Messrs. Denio, Cheney and co. of Boston. The work is done in a most excellent
and perfect manner; the pattern of the iron fence is neat and not elaborate;
the gateway on the westerly side presents a beautiful appearance, and
the effect of the whole is very fine." (The Salem Directory by George
Adams, 1851). The Visual/Design Assessment of the Salem Common Fence on
file in the City Planner's office states," Surrounding the Common
is a mid 19th-century cast iron fence (MHC #947). The octagonal cast iron
posts are capped by foliate urns with pine cone-like tops. The iron pickets
alternate two designs which are topped by diamonds or spears. At the base
of the fence are continuous x's decorated by rosettes." Salem Common
has only had three fences in its more than 300 year (recorded) history
(including the first 100-plus years in which it had no fence at all).
Looking carefully at the Ropes painting, the gates by McIntire can be
seen on the far left and on the far right behind the tall Lombardy poplars
(replaced nine years later by elms, as mentioned above, after a great
gale on Sept. 23, 1815 destroyed them). In the foreground where the booths
are lined up (on what is now Washington Square South) can be seen people
of the day strolling about; the gate on the left is to the west, or would
today be just diagonal from the Witch Museum. The early days of photography
actually provide us with a view of the western arch -- the more elaborate
one. In Figure 214 of the book Mr. Samuel McIntire, Carver, The Architect
of Salem by Fiske Kimball (1940), is a daguerreotype of the arch taken
before 1850. This book can be found in the "Salem Room" of the
Salem Public Library. The actual plate is at the Peabody-Essex Museum,
although age has rendered it scarcely recognizable (you can make out more
details of it in the reproduction of it in Kimball's book). One of McIntire's
gold leaved eagles originally sat atop the arch; it had already been removed,
though, by the time the 1850 daguerreotype was taken. But it was still
on top of the arch at least as late as 1839; it can be seen in a woodcut
made of the arch at that time. The eagle had been moved at some point
to the top of City Hall. However, after suffering hurricane damage sometime
after 1940, it was removed from there and replaced with an exact gold-leaved
replica (pictures of the original eagle are in Figures 367 and 368 in
the above-mentioned book about Samuel McIntire). The arch that stands
on the north side of the Common today, within the fence, has on it a plaque
that states it was erected July 4, 1976 and that it is a small replica
of the gate that stood at the west entrance to the Common from 1805 to
1850. Comparing it to the daguerreotype, it can be seen it's a faithful
replica except for the proportions of the swirls that come off the two
sides. It was built by Raymon Parga in commemoration of America's bicentennial.
In the early 1980's the condition of the iron fence had so deteriorated
that measures were taken to save it. It was felt that its poor condition
was inviting further vandalism. A DEM grant provided over a million dollars
for its restoration, along with other sources providing funding as well.
"A plan was formulated maximizing the Fence's space-defining function
and sense of completeness while minimizing disruption of the in-place
historicity of materials." (from the Preservation Restriction on
file in the City Planner's office). This included taking salvageable parts
from sections of the fence that had greatly decayed and using them to
restore other sections that were intact (or mostly so). Since Salem Common
is on the National Register of Historic Places, the preservation of the
architectural and historical integrity of its items are protected under
the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. Today, much of the damage
that occurred to the fence subsequent to the 1986 restoration has been
repaired. A massive community undertaking was organized to paint the fence
on its 150th birthday, reminiscent of days long gone by when American
families were more connected to each other through such town-wide events.
Even though all this work has been done in the last couple of years, there's
damage to other objects on the Common that are invitations to vandalism
and decay. And neglected maintenance is, indeed, such an invitation --
this seems to be borne out by the fact that little damage to the fence
has occurred since the people of Salem painted it. Joseph Felt's words
about the Common are particularly important today when he bids us "to
remember the promoters of its improvements with sentiments of esteem."
These would include all those who came out to paint it in the year 2000.
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