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West Salem is a village in La Crosse County, Wisconsin, United States, along the La Crosse River. It is part of the La Crosse-Onalaska, WI-MN Metropolitan Statistical Area . The population was 5,277 as of the 2020 census .
358 North Leonard Street and WI 16: West Salem: Two octagon houses, built in Neshonoc and later moved to West Salem when the railroad bypassed Neshonoc. Monroe Palmer was a mill owner who built the first house around 1855.
Hamlin Garland was born in West Salem in a log cabin in September 1860 on a farm his father bought a year earlier. [5] When he was older, he moved away from Wisconsin and lived elsewhere, particularly in Massachusetts, Iowa, and Illinois. Even so, Garland fondly remembered the place of his birth.
West Salem High School is a high school located in West Salem, Wisconsin, part of the West Salem School District. As of 2023-2024, 600 students were enrolled at West Salem High School. The school employs a faculty of 70 individuals, 79% of whom have a master's degree or higher.
West Salem is the name of several places in the United States: West Salem, Illinois; West Salem, Ohio; West Salem, Salem, Oregon, the Polk County portion of Salem; West Salem, Wisconsin; West Salem Township, Pennsylvania
The Palmer Brother's Octagons are two historic octagonal houses built by brothers, Dr. Horace Palmer and Monroe Palmer in or near West Salem, Wisconsin. [2] The Palmer-Gullickson Octagon House, the larger of the two, was built in 1856. With the help of Rachel Gullickson the West Salem Historical society was able to buy this house for ...
The following are people born in or otherwise closely associated with the village of West Salem, Wisconsin. Pages in category "People from West Salem, Wisconsin" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
The La Crosse Fairgrounds Speedway is a semi-banked asphalt oval racetrack in West Salem, Wisconsin. [2] The outer track is 5/8 mile and the inner track is a 1/4 mile. [2] The speedway has progressive banking in the corners, from 5 degrees on the bottom to 11 degrees on the top. The track was built at the fairgrounds for La Crosse County.