The Salt Palace

A small "palace" and museum made of, and devoted entirely, to salt

Category Natural Wonders, Geological Oddities, Wonders of Salt, Unique Collections, Architectural Oddities, Outsider Architecture

In Grand Saline, where both the salt industry and the name of the town date back to 1845, salt is everything. Grand Saline sits above an estimated 16,000 foot deep natural salt deposit (a supply estimated to last twenty thousand years), which is still mined by Morton.

The Salt Palace is actually the third salt palace to be built in the small town of Grand Saline, Texas. The first built in 1936 was torn down; the second, built in 1975, melted; however, this one, reconstructed in 1993, was made to last.

Made entirely of rock salt, the Salt Palace houses a small museum which includes salt mining memorabilia and photographs, and a film of the Morton Salt mining operations at 750 feet underground. The museum is free; visitors to the Salt Palace will also receive a salt crystal free of charge. Licking the walls, though a common occurrence, is frowned upon.

See an error? Know more? Edit this place.

  • Hours Tuesday through Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Sunday & Monday, legal holidays & each day during the noon hour
  • Website http://www.grandsaline.com/edb/salt01.htm
  • Address 100 West Garland Ave , Grand Saline, Texas, United States
  • Cost Free
Sources
Map/Directions

Go to Google Maps

Post a Comment

to comment. Use your Facebook account to login instantly. Anonymous comments will be held in moderation.

Enter the Captcha code below to confirm you're human:
Captcha Image

Contributors for The Salt Palace

Nearby Places

Obscura Day is coming!

Join us March 20th, 2010 in celebrating wondrous and curious places all over the world. RSVP for expeditions and tours at obscuraday.com.

Recent Activity

Facebook

Follow us on Twitter and Facebook

Email updates

Stay up to date on Atlas Obscura events, tours, and new features.

Elsewhere on the Web