Old Salem-Visitor Ctr
Photos and Videos
- HoursCLOSED NOW
- Regular Hours:
Wed - Sat - Phones:
Main - 336-721-7350
Fax - 336-721-7335
ExtraTollFree - 888-653-7253
Extra - 336-721-7300
Extra - 336-721-7305
- Address:
- 900 Old Salem Rd Winston Salem, NC 27101
- Links:
- Categories
- Historical Places, Historical Monuments, Museums, Places Of Interest, Tourist Information & Attractions
- Payment Options
- Location
- Old Salem is less than 30 minutes from Greensboro (via Interstate 40 or Business 40) and High Point (via 311 and Interstate 40/HWY 52); just under two and a half hours from Asheville; two hours from Roanoke, Va.; and 90 minutes from Charlotte, Raleigh, and Boone, N.C.
- Neighborhood
- Old Salem
- Amenities
- Hotels Near Old Salem (by distance), Eateries Near Old Salem, Shops in the Historic District
- AKA
Old Salem Inc
Old Salem Museums & Gardens
General Info
Old Salem Museums & Gardens is a historic site and museum combating food insecurity and exploring the stories of people, including Moravian, Black, and Indigenous peoples, in the American South. As one of America’s most comprehensive history attractions, our museums—the Historic Town of Salem, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA), and the Gardens at Old Salem—engage visitors in an educational and memorable historical experience. The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) contains the finest collection of its kind in the nation, featuring architecture, furniture, ceramics, metalwork, needlework, paintings, prints, and other decorative arts made and used in the early American South.Old Salem Museums & Gardens is a historic site and museum combating food insecurity and exploring the stories of people, including Moravian, Black, and Indigenous peoples, in the American South. As one of America’s most comprehensive history attractions, our museums—the Historic Town of Salem, the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA), and the Gardens at Old Salem—engage visitors in an educational and memorable historical experience. The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA) contains the finest collection of its kind in the nation, featuring architecture, furniture, ceramics, metalwork, needlework, paintings, prints, and other decorative arts made and used in the early American South.