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Corinth (/ k ə ˈ r ɪ n θ / kə-RINTH) is a town in Orange County, Vermont, United States. The population was 1,455 at the 2020 census. [3] Local services include a general store, post office, doctor's office, library, and ball field. [citation needed]
The Vermont State Fair, the official state fair of Vermont, is located at the fairgrounds. The fair contains a midway, entertainment, a restaurant, food stands, a petting zoo, and agricultural exhibits.
The Elwin Chase House stands a short way south of the village of East Topsham, on the east side of the Topsham-Corinth Road. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame structure, with a front-facing gabled roof and clapboarded exterior. The main facade, facing toward the street, is three bays wide, with the entrance in the leftmost bay.
Corinth, Vermont; N. Northeast Slopes; O. Orange-1 Vermont Representative District, 2002–2012 This page was last edited on 29 December 2013, at 17:22 (UTC). Text ...
The actress also notes how the town of East Corinth, Vt., screened the original movie in their small theater as the sequel shot on location. Residents of original “Beetlejuice” town met Jenna ...
The Fair Haven Green Historic District encompasses the village green of Fair Haven, Vermont, and the heterogeneous collection of civic, commercial, and residential buildings that line it and adjacent streets. The area was developed mainly following the arrival of the railroad in 1848 and the subsequent expansion of marble and slate quarries in ...
The town of Peacham was first settled in 1776, partly as a consequence of the construction of the Bayley-Hazen Military Road during the American Revolutionary War.In the Peacham Corner area that became the town center, that road, now the major north–south route through the town, skirted around a hill on which the early town center was laid out.
Wallingford is a small agricultural community in the Otter Creek valley of central Vermont, 10 miles (16 km) south of Rutland. It was settled in the 1770s, with its main village established on Roaring Brook, a tributary of Otter Creek. It developed as an agricultural area, and as a stop on the north–south stagecoach route, now US 7.