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The South Londonderry Village Historic District encompasses a significant portion of the historic developed area of the village of South Londonderry, Vermont. The village has a well-preserved mid-19th century core, with most of its major development history taking place between about 1806 and 1860.
The CDP is in northwestern Windham County, in the south-central part of the town of Londonderry. It sits on both sides of the West River, a southeast-flowing tributary of the Connecticut River. Vermont Route 100 passes through the community, leading north 2.5 miles (4.0 km) to Londonderry village and south 9 miles (14 km) to Jamaica.
February 17, 1983 (Main St. from Vernon to Walnut, Flat, Elliot, High, and Grove Sts.; also Plaza Park, Main St. at its junction with Canal St., Vermont Routes 119 and 142, and 1 Holstein Place
Londonderry is a town in Windham County, Vermont, United States. It is bounded on the north by Landgrove and Weston, on the east by Windham, on the south by Jamaica and on the west by Winhall and Landgrove. The population was 1,919 in the 2020 census. [3] The town contains the villages of Londonderry and South Londonderry.
The railroad of West River Railroad Company, herein called the West River Railroad, is a single-track, standard-gage, steam railroad, located in Vermont. The owned mileage extends from Brattleboro to South Londonderry and consists of 35.397 miles of road and 2.519 miles of yard tracks and sidings, making a total of 37.916 miles of all tracks.
The Londonderry Town House, or the Londonderry Town Hall is the town hall of Londonderry, Vermont. It is located on Middletown Road in the village of South Londonderry . Built in 1860, its architecture encapsulates the changing functions of this type of public venue through more than 100 years of history.
South Windham is a rural hill village, nestled in a now-forested valley in southernmost Windham, just across the town line with Jamaica on Windham Hill Road. The settlement consists of eleven main structures, the most notable of which is the Valley Bible Church, built in 1825 and distinguished by its brick sides and rear wall as well as its Federal architecture.
The Hoosac Tunnel and Wilmington Railroad (HTW) was an interstate shortline railroad running north–south between southwestern Vermont and northwestern Massachusetts.It ran from Wilmington, Vermont to Rowe, Massachusetts, a distance of approximately 25 miles (40 km).