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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.
The Center for Cartoon Studies currently operates out of two buildings in the historic district of White River Junction, Vermont. The school rents space in the former Colodny’s Surprise Department Store Building, and in December 2011 the school purchased a former Post Office a few buildings down from Department Store Building. [1]
Hartford is a town in Windsor County, Vermont, United States. It is on the New Hampshire border, at the intersection of Interstates 89 and 91 . It is the site of the confluence of the White and Connecticut rivers ; the Ottauquechee River also flows through the town. [ 4 ]
This is a complete list of school districts in Vermont. Union school districts necessarily overlap (include) other, often town-based or village-based, school districts. [1] All Vermont school districts are independent governments.
Green Mountain Union High School, Chester; Hartford High School, White River Junction; Mid Vermont Christian School, Quechee; Okemo Mountain School, Ludlow; River Valley Technical Center, Springfield; The Sharon Academy, Sharon; Springfield High School, Springfield; White River Valley High School, South Royalton; Windsor High School, Windsor
West Hartford is an unincorporated community village in the town of Hartford, Windsor County, Vermont, United States. It is one of Hartford's five villages, situated on the White River and crossed by the Appalachian Trail. West Hartford no longer has a post office, but still has a local library, and a town park. The White River, is a nearby ...
Hartford Village Grammar School, 23 School Street, 1906. Cascadnac Grange, 194 Hartford Main Street, c.1870. Hartford Diner, 190 Hartford Main Street, c.1940. Kneeland-Cone House, 173 Hartford Main Street, 1804, 1890/1897. Wyllys Lyman House, 185 Hartford Main Street, 1828. Brooks Store-Pease Block, 201-203 Hartford Main Street, c.1900.
[6] [7] On March 12, 1772, Albany County was partitioned to create Charlotte County, [8] and this situation remained until Vermont's independence from New York and Britain. Windsor County was established on February 16, 1781, from parts of Cumberland County and organized the same year.