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The Burlington Sentinel, another Burlington newspaper, favored Andrew Jackson while the Free Press, under Austin and Foote, supported incumbent President John Quincy Adams. [5] The format of the weekly Burlington Free Press was four pages, with five columns of copy on each page. The paper itself was 18 inches long. [6]
Lake Champlain Islander - North Hero, Vermont [1] [2] Manchester Journal - Manchester, Vermont [3] News & Citizen - Morrisville, Vermont; The Mountain Times - Killington, Vermont; Northfield News & Transcript - Northfield, Vermont; The Other Paper - South Burlington, Vermont; Randolph Herald - Randolph, Vermont; Seven Days - Burlington, Vermont
Bernie Sanders, former mayor of Burlington (1981–1989), U.S. Senator from Vermont since 2007, and 2016 and 2020 Democratic presidential candidate; Charles Plympton Smith, banker and politician; Thomas W. Sorrell, U.S. Marshal for Vermont [30] William Sorrell, attorney general of Vermont; Jake Sullivan, U.S. National Security Advisor [31]
[2] In May 2017, they bought the Shelburne News, a weekly covering Shelburne, Vermont, and The Citizen, a weekly covering the towns of Charlotte and Hinesburg, Vermont. [3] In January 2019, the company had grown to include six weekly community newspapers and changed its name to the Vermont Community Newspaper Group. [4]
It is owned by Vermont News and Media LLC. The Reformer was possibly the first newspaper in the United States to run same-sex union announcements in parallel to the usual wedding notices, [3] beginning the practice in 1989, well before the state of Vermont legalized civil unions. It is the only newspaper in the United States called "Reformer." [4]
The Hoffs moved to Burlington, Vermont, in 1951, [2] where Hoff began a law practice. He also became involved in local politics as a Democrat, and was a founder of the activist group Vermont Democratic Volunteers. [7] [8] In addition to serving as a justice of the peace, [9] he was also chairman of the city zoning board. [10]
Waller, John D., Lost in Glastenbury, Bennington Banner (VT) (Oct 4, 2008), accessed 13 March 2017; The Bennington Triangle, The Cracker Barrel (Wilmington, VT) (Fall 2004), available at vitualvermonter.com, accessed 2009-09-03; Glastenbury tales: Town offers no clues to mysteries hanging over it, Rutland Herald (Nov. 8, 1999)
The Vermont election in 2008 consisted of elections for federal, state, and local elections. All state offices are for two years; all terms expired in 2008. Elections included the gubernatorial, all state offices, including all state senators and representatives, the federal Congress and the presidential. There was no federal Senate seat open.