Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Brian Crossman, 46, was found dead Sunday alongside wife Erica, 41, and her 13-year-old son Colin Taft in the home they shared in Tawlett, where Crossman had recently been elected to the Select ...
The Bennington Banner is a daily newspaper published in Bennington, Vermont. The paper covers local, national, and world news. It is distributed throughout Southwestern Vermont and eastern New York (Rensselaer and Washington Counties). The paper is owned by Vermont News and Media LLC and is published Monday through Friday, plus a weekend ...
John Robinson was born in County Meath, Ireland on May 8, 1838, a son of Thomas Robinson and Mary (Flood) Robinson. [1] [2] His family immigrated to the United States in 1839, and Robinson was raised and educated in Shaftsbury and Bennington. [1]
The Bennington County state's attorney was notified, and the county sheriff was brought in to help with the search. Over the next couple of days, Welden's visit to the Long Trail was discovered when one of the hikers she had approached identified her from the photo in the Bennington Banner newspaper, where he worked. [6] Weeks of searching ensued.
Ray Magliozzi, co-host of NPR's weekly radio show, Car Talk; taught science in Bennington; Bernard Malamud, novelist and short story writer; taught at Bennington College; Jules Olitski, painter; taught at Bennington College (1963–1967) Mary Oliver, poet; lived in Bennington; Beverley Owen, actress; lived and died in Bennington
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Stanley C. Wilson was born in Orange, Vermont, on September 10, 1879, the son of William W. Wilson (1835–1912) and Lydia (Browning) Wilson (1841–1923). [3] He graduated from Goddard Seminary in Barre in 1896, and then taught school for a year to save enough to begin attending college. [4]
Reginald William Buzzell was born in Magog, Quebec, Canada on March 22, 1894, the son of William A. Buzzell and Harriet "Hattie" Mitson Buzzell Squires. [1] His father died when he was six, and after his mother's remarriage, the family moved to Newport, Vermont, where Buzzell attended the local schools, including the Hillside District School.