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Apr 17, 2018; Houston, TX, USA; View of a sign with the company logo at Starbucks. Mandatory Credit: Shanna Lockwood-USA TODAY Sports ORIG FILE ID: 20180417_sal_lb9_3786.JPG
Mark and Diedre Radicioni became the proprietors of Ye Olde Tavern around 1993. They took it over after losing their Grabbers Restaurant in Manchester to a fire. [1] During their time as proprietors, Ye Olde Tavern was named the 1996 Restaurant of the Year by the National Restaurant Academy in the "Most Outstanding Value" category. [1]
Hartland Four Corners is an unincorporated village in the town of Hartland, Windsor County, Vermont, United States. The community is located along Vermont Route 12, 8.8 miles (14.2 km) southwest of White River Junction. Hartland Four Corners has a post office with ZIP code 05049, which opened on July 5, 1854. [2] [3]
The village, originally known as Olcott Falls, is unique as an early planned community developed in part by Charles Wilder, owner of a local paper mill in the 1880s. [5] [6] One feature of Wilder's plan was an orderly street plan in which streets were laid out at right angles, [6] with several of the streets named after trees.
The district is located along a section of Main Street (Vermont Route 103) and Depot Street and includes the former Ludlow Woolen Mills (now housing a condominium and several retail businesses), post office, meeting hall, Black River Academy, fire house, and several churches, businesses, and residences.
Vermont Route 106 (VT 106) is a 25.963-mile-long (41.783 km) north–south state highway in Windsor County, Vermont, United States.The route begins at an intersection with VT 11 in the town of Springfield and runs along the Black River for several miles, crossing through Weathersfield, Reading and Woodstock before reaching the village of Woodstock, where it ends at a junction with U.S. Route 4 ...
Although Springfield's alluvial flats made it among the best agricultural towns in the state, the Black River falls, which drop 110 feet (34 m) in 1 ⁄ 8 of a mile (200 m), helped it develop into a mill town. [5] Springfield was located in the center of the Precision Valley region, home of the Vermont machine tool industry.
Springfield is a census-designated place (CDP) comprising the main settlement within the town of Springfield, Windsor County, Vermont, United States. The population of the CDP was 3,979 at the 2010 census , [ 3 ] compared with 9,373 for the town as a whole.