Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
White River Junction in 1889 White River Junction is an unincorporated village and census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Hartford in Windsor County , Vermont , United States. The population was 2,528 at the 2020 census , up from 2,286 in 2010 , making it the largest community within the town of Hartford.
Coolidge Hotel, 1924. The village of White River Junction is located in central eastern Vermont, at the mouth of the White River where it joins the Connecticut River.First settled in the 1760s, it was from the 1840s to the 1960s the most important railroad junction in northern New England, providing an interchange point between the Boston and Maine Railroad (originally known as the Connecticut ...
The Terraces Historic District encompasses a historic late 19th and early 20th-century residential area of White River Junction, Vermont.The district, developed as an upper middle-class residential area beginning in 1880, features a variety of architectural styles encapsulating the community's growth through about 1930.
White River Junction Historic District; White River Junction station This page was last edited on 4 January 2014, at 13:42 (UTC). Text ...
The Lyman Bridge crosses the Connecticut River to connect West Lebanon, New Hampshire, to White River Junction, Vermont. It is named for Elias Lyman, who built the original bridge at this location. [1] The current bridge was opened on Saturday, October 28, 2017. [2] The Lyman Bridge carries U.S. Route 4 and a pedestrian walkway on both sides.
Eastern end of concurrency with VT 100: Bridgewater: 43.642: 70.235: VT 100A south – Plymouth, Plymouth Union: Northern terminus of VT 100A: Village of Woodstock: 51.624 [11] 83.081: VT 106 south – South Woodstock, Springfield: Northern terminus of VT 106: 51.755: 83.292: VT 12 north (Pleasant Street) – Bethel: Western end of concurrency ...
From June 26, 1781, until February 23, 1782, Vermont attempted to annex part of New York east of the Hudson River (the so-called West Union); inhabitants in the area favored Vermont's township form of government, while Vermont hoped to gain bargaining power through expansion. [6] New York did not lose control of the area.
Hartford village was first established in the late 18th century, when it was called White River Village. In its early years, it was the town's principal community center, but it was later supplanted in that role by White River Junction , which is approximately one mile east of Hartford village.