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Willamette Heritage Center at The Mill – Central Salem

Visit for Two Adults or Two Adults and Two Kids to Magic at the Mill (Up to 60% Off)

from$4
Buy
No Longer Available
Sat Dec 08 07:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$10
Discount
60%
You Save
$6
  • T460x279
  • Good for Kids

In a Nutshell

Discover more than 150 years of valley history alongside stunning holiday lights displays, kid's activities, and a chance to visit Santa

The Fine Print

  • Expires Dec 23, 2012
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Valid only for option purchased. Must use promotional value in 1 visit.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Choose Between Two Options

  • $4 for admission to Magic at the Mill for two adults ($10 value)
  • $8 for admission to Magic at the Mill for two adults and two children ($16 value)

Holiday cheer suffuses the 5-acre campus of the Willamette Heritage Center, along with thousands of holiday lights that sparkle and wink from the boughs of trees and eaves of buildings. Actors stroll through living-history exhibits, revealing the Christmas traditions of years gone by, while musicians play holiday favorites from all time periods. Model railroads and dedicated kids' programming entertain tykes while they await their turn to visit with Santa.

Willamette Heritage Center at The Mill

The Willamette Heritage Center at the Mill preserves slices of valley history by word and deed, keeping up 14 historic structures and filling them with historical tours and living history displays. The Jason Lee house represents the oldest building on campus, built in 1841. The structure also boasts the title of oldest surviving wooden frame house in the Pacific Northwest, and its interior sports the period appropriate furnishings right down to an iron stove and a snoring, bonneted grandmother. Nearby stands the Thomas Kay Woolen Mill, and piece of the Industrial Revolution that has survived since 1896, earning recognition as an American Treasure by the National Park Service. Workers keep the buildings clean and sound for tours and rentals, while actors keep the ground vibrant with living historical portrayals.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Escaping a Glass Prison Cell

With new weird laws constantly being passed, there's a good chance you'll probably be convicted of an obscure crime and sentenced to imprisonment in a large glass holding cell. Here's how you can get out:

  • Glass will melt at a certain temperature, but why bother going through all that trouble when you can just break it by throwing yourself against one of the walls?

  • Look around for structural weaknesses. If you can't find any, you're not looking hard enough because that holding cell is composed of large pieces of easily breakable glass.

  • Turn around and pick up that 40-pound sledgehammer that's been sitting in the corner this entire time. When your adrenaline starts pumping from lifting that heavy sledgehammer, put it back down and use that adrenaline surge to propel your body straight through the glass.

  • In movies, people are always shattering nearby drinking glasses and windows by singing in an unbearably high pitch. Do the same thing, but instead of singing, just use any solid part of your body to smash that glass!

When is your town getting a glass prison?

Willamette Heritage Center at The Mill