The 2013 season at Pioneer Village may be the last one and this may be my last post for this blog. Below is an article that appeared in the Salem Evening News this week.
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Ken
 Yuszkus/Staff photo Cheri and Alexei Grishin and their 10-year-old 
daughter, Natalia, walk among the buildings at Salem Pioneer Village, a 
living history museum that has been maintained and run by Gordon College
 for the past four years. The school has announced that it will not 
renew its agreement with the city to manage the site. | 
May 13, 2013
Gordon College will no longer 
manage Salem Pioneer Village
SALEM — The future of Salem Pioneer Village is up in the air as 
Gordon College announced this month that it will not renew its agreement
 to manage the city-owned living history site.
The Wenham college will continue programming and school tours at the village through June.
Mayor
 Kim Driscoll said she has begun to “explore options” for Salem Pioneer 
Village — both to keep the site open through the remainder of the summer
 season and to maintain it long-term.
“I’d hate to see it move 
backwards, because (Gordon College) has done so much work there,” 
Driscoll said. “I wouldn’t say anything is off the table. I’m trying to 
understand what all our options are right now.”
The 5-acre Salem 
Pioneer Village, off West Avenue, was built in 1930 as a stage set for a
 city-organized pageant to mark the 300th anniversary of the arrival of 
Gov. John Winthrop to Massachusetts’ shores. With a blacksmith’s shop, 
wigwam and thatched-roof cottages, the site is meant to depict Salem as 
it would have appeared to settlers arriving in the 1630s.
Gordon College has managed the pioneer village and Salem’s Old Town Hall on Essex Street since 2008.
The
 college will drop Salem Pioneer Village this year in order to focus its
 efforts and resources on Old Town Hall, said David Goss, professor of 
public history and director of Gordon’s Institute for Public History.
“We
 had to sit down and say, ‘We only have so many resources, so many 
people. Where can we do our best job?’ ” Goss said. “It was a very 
difficult decision because I love the village. From a realistic point of
 view, we can only spread ourselves so thin.”
Making the village 
work, financially, has always been a struggle and has even caused the 
site to close in the past, Driscoll said. It’s located outside of 
downtown and is not within walking distance of the city’s other tourist 
attractions.
“(Gordon) was terrific in terms of bringing it back 
to life, but it’s really hard financially to make it work for them,” 
Driscoll said. “We’re glad to be keeping them at Old Town Hall.”
“We’re
 not in any way divorcing ourselves from our commitment to the city of 
Salem. We’re just trying to have a more realistic and doable agenda,” 
Goss said. “Running two historic sites was a pretty ambitious 
undertaking. It finally reached a point where we had to decide where to 
place our greatest effort.”
Despite its location, attendance at 
the village has risen steadily in recent years, Goss said. The village 
saw 12,000 visitors last year — half of whom came during the Halloween 
season.
Since 2008, Gordon College opened the village to the 
public on weekends through the summer and fall; ran living history 
programs and special events, such as a pirate-themed day; and did 
educational programming for school, Scout and other youth groups.
Gordon
 College had signed a “memorandum of understanding” with the city, 
Driscoll said — the city did not pay Gordon to manage the property or 
receive any revenue from its operation.
Last week, upon learning 
of the college’s decision, Driscoll said her “initial reaction” is that 
the city would not run the village itself.
“We’d like to find a 
way to make it work,” Driscoll said. “It would be great to have another 
nonprofit running it, managing it. Initially, our priority is 
short-term, something for the summer.”
“My preference is to keep it open this summer, but it’s not lost on me how hard that is,” she said.
Any
 long-term contract to run the village would have to go out to bid, she 
said. The issue will be discussed at a meeting of the city’s Parks and 
Recreation Commission later this month.
Salem Pioneer Village is an extension of Forest River Park.
Numerous
 improvements have been made at Salem Pioneer Village during Gordon 
College’s tenure, including replacing broken windows, re-thatching 
roofs, reconstructing the fences around the property, building bridges 
over two brooks at the site and replanting gardens. 
The wigwam 
has been rebuilt from the ground up, and the blacksmith’s forge has been
 restored and is once again functional, Goss said.
Gordon College 
ran the village with a staff of six, plus volunteers, he said. The site 
has 12 buildings, including five Colonial houses, two dugout structures 
with log roofs, the wigwam and the blacksmith’s shop.
“I’m very 
hopeful there will be a successor that will step in and continue these 
programs,” Goss said. “...The village is in pretty good shape and 
whoever takes it over will benefit from that.”
At Old Town Hall, 
the college will continue to run its first-floor museum devoted to Salem
 history and the “Cry Innocent” seasonal drama production. 
The Salem Museum saw 30,000 visitors last year, Goss said.
They’re repainting Old Town Hall’s interior this month and opening a new exhibit this spring on Parker Brothers games, he said.
“We’re
 very committed to trying to tell the story of Salem,” Goss said. “(The 
decision to leave Salem Pioneer Village) is not a turning away from 
Salem, or in any way lessening our commitment to Salem.” 
Bethany Bray can be reached at bbray@salemnews.com and on Twitter @SalemNewsBB.