Vermont Vacation Guide System
Vermont History
The history of Vermont begins more than 10,500 years before the present day.
Early history
Vermont
was covered with shallow seas periodically from the Cambrian to
Devonian periods. Most of the sedimentary rocks laid down in these seas
were deformed by mountain-building. Fossils, however, are common in the
Lake Champlain region. Lower areas of western Vermont were flooded
again, as part of the St. Lawrence Valley an Champlain Valley by Lake
Vermont whose northern boundary followed the melting glacier at the end
of the last ice age, until it reached the ocean. This was replaced by
Lake Vermont and the Champlain Sea, when the land had not yet rebounded
from the weight of the glaciers which were sometimes 2 miles (3.2 km)
thick. Shells of salt-water mollusks, along with the bones of beluga
whales, have been found in the Lake Champlain region.
Lake
Vermont connected to a glacial western lake near what is now the Great
Lakes. They allowed western fish to enter the state, which is why
Vermont has more native species than any other New England State, 78.
About half of these are western in origin.
Little is known of
the pre-Columbian history of Vermont. Between 8500 to 7000 BC, glacial
activity created the saltwater Champlain Sea. This brought eventually
landlocked lamprey, Atlantic salmon, and rainbow smelt.
Native
Americans inhabited and hunted in Vermont. From 7000 to 1000 BC was the
Archaic Period. During that era, Native Americans migrated year-round.
From 1000 BC to 1600 AD was the Woodland Period, when villages and
trade networks were established, and ceramic and bow and arrow
technology were developed. The western part of the state became home to
a small population of Algonquian-speaking tribes, including the Mohican
and Abenaki peoples. Sometime between 1500 and 1600, the Iroquois drove
many of the smaller native tribes out of Vermont, later using the area
as a hunting ground and warring with the remaining Abenaki.
European outposts and settlements
The
first European to see the area that is now Vermont is thought to be
Jacques Cartier, in 1535. On July 30, 1609, French explorer Samuel de
Champlain claimed the area of what is now Lake Champlain, giving to the
mountains the appellation of les Verts Monts (the Green Mountains).
Since in the French language adjectives normally come after the noun,
the usual structure of this name would be "les Monts Verts." However,
when an adjective is intended to be emphasized, it may be placed before
the noun, which is the likely explanation for the origin of Vermont's
name. It has been suggested that a possible alternative source of the
name was "Vers Monts," meaning "towards mountains", so-called because
Champlain approached the mountains from the relatively flat plains of
Quebec.
France claimed Vermont as part of New France, and
erected Fort Sainte Anne on Isle La Motte in 1666 as part of their
fortification of Lake Champlain. This was the first European settlement
in Vermont and the site of the first Roman Catholic mass.
During
the latter half of the 17th century, non-French settlers began to
explore Vermont and its surrounding area. In 1690, a group of
Dutch-British settlers from Albany under Captain Jacobus de Warm
established the De Warm Stockade at Chimney Point (eight miles west of
Addison). This settlement and trading post was directly across the lake
from Crown Point, New York (Pointe à la Chevelure).
There were
regular periods of skirmishing between English colonies to the south
and the French colony to the north, and the area of Vermont was an
unsettled frontier. In 1704, De Rouville passed up the Winooski (Onion)
River, to reach the Connecticut, and then down to Deerfield,
Massachusetts, which he raided.
The first permanent British
settlement was established in 1724 with the construction of Fort Dummer
in Vermont's far southeast under the command of Lieutenant Timothy
Dwight of Connecticut. This fort protected the nearby settlements of
Dummerston and Brattleboro in the surrounding area. These settlements
were made by people from Massachusetts and Connecticut. The second
British settlement at Bennington in the southwest corner of Vermont
would not be made until after 37 years of conflict in the region.
In
1731, the French arrived at Chimney Point, near Addison. Here they
constructed a small temporary wooden stockade (Fort de Pieux) until
work on Fort St. Frédéric began in 1734. The fort, when completed, gave
the French control of the New France/Vermont border region in the Lake
Champlain Valley and was the only permanent fort in the area until the
building of Fort Carillon more than 20 years later. The government
encouraged French colonization, leading to the development of small
French settlements in the valley. The British attempted to take Fort
St. Frédéric four times between 1755 and 1758; in 1759 a combined force
of 12,000 British regular and provincial troops under Sir Jeffrey
Amherst captured the fort. The French were driven out of the area and
retreated to other forts along the Richelieu River, the northern outlet
of Lake Champlain. One year later, a group of Mohawks burned the
Chimney Point settlement to the ground, leaving only chimneys and
giving the area its name.
There was another period of conflict
from 1740 to 1748, the War of the Austrian Succession or King George's
War. There were raids at a private defensive work, Bridgeman's Fort, in
Vernon, Vermont, and in 1747 there was an extended siege of Fort at
Number 4 at Charlestown, New Hampshire, across the river. The French
force, led by M. DeBeline, consisted of 400 French and Indians.
During
the French and Indian War, 1755–1761, some Vermont settlers, including
Ethan Allen, joined the colonial militia assisting the British in
attacks on the French. Fort Carillon on the west shore of Lake
Champlain, a French fort constructed in 1755, was the site of two
British offensives under Lord Amherst's command: the unsuccessful
British attack in 1758 and the retaking of the following year with no
major resistance (most of the garrison had been removed to defend
Quebec, Montreal, and the western forts).
Rogers' Rangers staged
their attack against the village of Saint-Francis, Quebec from Lake
Champlain in 1759. Separating afterwards, they fled the angered
Abenakis through northern Vermont back to safety in Lake Champlain and
New Hampshire.
Following France's loss in the French and Indian
War, the 1763 Treaty of Paris gave control of the whole region to the
British. Colonial settlement was limited by the British to lands east
of the Appalachians, and Vermont was divided nearly in half in a jagged
line running from Fort William Henry in Lake George diagonally
north-eastward to Lake Memphremagog. Lands north of this line, included
the entire Champlain Valley was reserved for Indians.
New Hampshire Grants, New York's Claim, and the Vermont Republic
The
end of the war brought new settlers to Vermont. The first settler of
the grants was Samuel Robinson, who began clearing land in Bennington
in 1761.
In the 28 years from 1763 to 1791, the non-Indian population of Vermont rose from 300 to 85,000.
A
fort at Crown Point had been built, and the Crown Point Military Road
stretched across the Green Mountains from Springfield to Chimney Point,
making traveling from the neighboring British colonies easier than ever
before. Three colonies laid claim to the area. The Province of
Massachusetts Bay claimed the land on the basis of the 1629 charter of
the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The Province of New York claimed Vermont
based on land granted to the Duke of York (later King James II) in
1664. The Province of New Hampshire, whose western limits had never
been determined, also claimed Vermont, in part based upon a decree of
George II in 1740. 0n March 5, 1740, George II ruled that
Massachusetts's northern boundary in this area would be from a point
near the Merrimack River due west (its present location). The boundary
was surveyed by Richard Hasen in 1741, and Fort Dummer (Brattleboro),
was found to be north of the line. Provisions and support for Fort
Dummer were ordered by the Colonial Office from New Hampshire in the
following years.
The flag of the Green Mountain Boys
New
Hampshire's immensely popular governor, Benning Wentworth, issued a
series of 135 land grants between 1749 and 1764 called the New
Hampshire Grants. Many of these were in a large valley on the west (or
New York side) of the Green Mountains and only about forty miles from
Albany. The town was laid out in 1749 and was settled after the war in
1761. The town was named Bennington for Wentworth. The location of the
town was well north of the Massachusetts limit set by decree in 1740,
and east of the known eastern limit of New York, twenty miles east of
the Hudson River. Ultimately, by 1754, Wentworth had granted lands for
15 towns.
On July 20, 1764, King George III established the
boundary between New Hampshire and New York along the west bank of the
Connecticut River, north of Massachusetts, and south of 45 Degrees
north latitude. Under this decree, Albany County, New York, as it then
existed, implicitly gained the land presently known as Vermont.
Although disputes occasionally broke out later, this line became the
boundary between New Hampshire and Vermont, and is the modern boundary.
When New York refused to recognize land titles through the New
Hampshire Grants (towns created earlier by New Hampshire in present
Vermont), dissatisfied colonists organized in opposition, which led to
the creation of independent Vermont on January 18, 1777.
New
York took the declaration of 1764 to apply retroactively, and
considered the New Hampshire grants invalid. It therefore required land
holders to purchase new grants for the same land from New York. New
York then created counties in the region, with courthouses, sheriffs,
and jails, and began ejectment proceedings against all those who held
land by New Hampshire grants.
In 1770, Ethan Allen—along with
his brothers Ira and Levi, as well as Seth Warner—recruited an informal
militia, the Green Mountain Boys, to protect the interests of the
original New Hampshire settlers against the new migrants from New York.
A significant standoff occurred at the Breckinridge farm in Bennington,
when a sheriff from Albany arrived with a posse of 750 men to
dispossess Breckinridge. The residents raised a body of about 300 armed
men to resist. The Albany sheriff demanded Breckinridge, and was
informed, "If you attempt it, you are a dead man." The sheriff returned
to Albany.
When a New York judge arrived in Westminster with New
York settlers in March 1775, violence broke out as angry citizens took
over the courthouse and called a sheriff's posse. This resulted in the
deaths of Daniel Houghton and William French in the "Westminster
Massacre".
In the summer of 1776, the first general convention
of freemen of the New Hampshire Grants met in Dorset, Vermont,
resolving "to take suitable measures to declare the New Hampshire
Grants a free and independent district." On January 18, 1777,
representatives of the New Hampshire Grants convened in Westminster and
declared their land an independent republic. For the first six months
of the republic's existence, the state was called New Connecticut.
On
June 2, a second convention of 72 delegates met at Westminster, known
as the "Westminster Convention". At this meeting, the delegates adopted
the name "Vermont" on the suggestion of Dr. Thomas Young of
Philadelphia, a supporter of the delegates who wrote a letter advising
them on how to achieve statehood. The delegates set the time for a
meeting one month later. On July 4, the Constitution of Vermont was
drafted during a violent thunderstorm at the Windsor Tavern owned by
Elijah West. It was adopted by the delegates on July 8 after four days
of debate. This was the first written constitution in North America to
provide for the abolition of slavery, suffrage for men who did not own
land, and public schools. The tavern has been preserved as the Old
Constitution House, administered as a state historic site.
Religion
In
colonial times, like many of its neighboring states, Vermont's largest
religious affiliation was Congregationalism. In 1776, 63% of affiliated
church members in Vermont were Congregationalists. At that time,
however, only 9% of people belonged to a specific church due to the
remoteness of population centers.
Revolutionary War
The
Battle of Bennington, fought on August 16, 1777, was a seminal event in
the history of the state of Vermont. The nascent republican government,
created after years of political turmoil, faced challenges from New
York, New Hampshire, Great Britain and the new United States, none of
which recognized its sovereignty. The republic's ability to defeat a
powerful military invader gave it a legitimacy among its scattered
frontier society that would sustain it through fourteen years of
fragile independence before it finally achieved statehood as the 14th
state in the union in 1791.
During the summer of 1777, the
invading British army of General John Burgoyne slashed southward from
Canada to the Hudson River, captured the strategic stronghold of Fort
Ticonderoga, and drove the Continental Army into a desperate southward
retreat. Raiding parties of British soldiers and native warriors freely
attacked, pillaged and burned the frontier communities of the Champlain
Valley and threatened all settlements to the south. The Vermont
frontier collapsed in the face of the British invasion. The New
Hampshire legislature, fearing an invasion from the west, mobilized the
state's militia under the command of General John Stark.
General
Burgoyne received intelligence that large stores of horses, food and
munitions were kept at Bennington, which was the largest community in
the land grant area. He dispatched 2,600 men, nearly a third of his
army, to seize the colonial storehouse there, unaware that General
Stark's New Hampshire troops were then traversing the Green Mountains
to join up at Bennington with the Vermont continental regiments
commanded by Colonel Seth Warner, together with the local Vermont and
western Massachusetts militia. The combined American forces, under
Stark's command, attacked the British column at Hoosick, New York, just
across the border from Bennington. General Stark reportedly challenged
his men to fight to the death, telling them that: "There are your
enemies, the redcoats and the Tories. They are ours, or this night
Molly Stark sleeps a widow!" In a desperate, all-day battle fought in
intense summer heat, the army of Yankee farmers killed or captured
virtually the entire British detachment. General Burgoyne never
recovered from this loss and eventually surrendered the remainder of
his 6,000-man force at Saratoga, New York, on October 17.
The
battles of Bennington and Saratoga are recognized as the turning point
in the Revolutionary War because they were the first major defeat of a
British army and convinced the French that the Americans were worthy of
military aid. Stark became widely known as the "Hero of Bennington",
and the anniversary of the battle is still celebrated in Vermont as a
legal holiday known as "Bennington Battle Day". Under the portico of
the Vermont Statehouse, next to an heroic granite statue of Ethan
Allen, there is a brass cannon that was captured from the British
troops at the Battle of Bennington.
Statehood and the ante-bellum era
Vellum
manuscript of the Constitution of Vermont, 1777. This constitution was
amended in 1786, and again in 1793 following Vermont's admission to the
federal union in 1791.
Vermont continued to govern itself as a
sovereign entity based in the eastern town of Windsor for 14 years.
Thomas Chittenden acted as chief magistrate of Vermont from 1778 to
1789 and from 1790 to 1791. In the 1780s Chittenden, the Allen
brothers, and other political leaders engaged in negotiations with
Frederick Haldimand, the British governor of Quebec over the
possibility of Vermont becoming a British province. These negotiations,
which drew accusations of treason from a variety of observers,
ultimately failed in part due to the timely surrender of Cornwallis at
Yorktown in 1781.
The first General Assembly votes to establish
two counties, Bennington in the west and Unity in the east. It adopts
the common law of England as the basis for its legal system. It also
votes to confiscate Tory lands and sell them to finance the militia.
This is the first "tax."
The first newspaper was published in the state in 1781, the weekly Vermont Gazette.
In 1784, the state established a postal service linking several towns and Albany, New York.
In
1786, the Vermont governor replied to requests from Massachusetts about
the Shays' Rebellion, saying that he was willing to extradite members
of the rebellion, though his response was "pro forma" only since the
state could ill afford to discourage immigration.
The gold leaf dome
of the Vermont State House in Montpelier is visible for many miles
around the city. This is the third State House on the site, and like
the second, was built in the Greek Revival architectural style. It was
completed in 1857. Montpelier became the state capital in 1805.
In
1791, Vermont joined the federal Union as the fourteenth state —
becoming the first state to enter the Union after the original thirteen
colonies, and as a counterweight to slaveholding Kentucky, which was
admitted to the Union later the same year.
Because of the
proximity of Canada, Vermonters were somewhat alarmed during the War of
1812. Five thousand troops were stationed in Burlington at one point,
outnumbering residents. About 500 of these died of disease. An
expeditionary force of Quebec Eastern Townships’ volunteers destroyed a
barracks built at Derby with no personnel casualties. The war, fought
over what seemed like obscure maritime considerations to landlocked
Vermont, was not popular.
Merino sheep were introduced in 1812.
This ultimately resulted in a boom-bust cycle for wool. Wool reached a
price of 57 cents/pound in 1835. By 1837, there were 1,000,000 sheep in
the state. The price of wool dropped to 25 cents/pound in the late
1840s. The state could not withstand more efficient competition from
western states, and sheep raising collapsed.
Vermont had a unicameral legislature until 1836.
In 1846, the ground was broken for the construction of the first railroad in Vermont, Central Vermont Railway, in Northfield.
In
1853, Vermont passed a strict law prohibiting the consumption of
alcoholic beverages. Some towns followed the law, while others ignored
it.
French-Canadian migration started before the Civil War and accelerated during the 1860s.
Civil War era
An
1854 Vermont Senate report on slavery echoed the Vermont Constitution's
first article, on the rights of all men, questioning how a government
could favor the rights of one people over another. The report fueled
growth of the abolition movement in the state, and in response, a
resolution from the Georgia General Assembly authorized the towing of
Vermont out to sea. The mid to late 1850s saw a transition from
Vermonters mostly favoring slavery's containment, to a far more serious
opposition to the institution. As the Whig party shriveled, Vermont
changed its allegiance to the emergent Republican Party. In 1860, it
voted for President Abraham Lincoln, giving him the largest margin of
victory of any state.
More than 28,100 Vermonters served in
Vermont volunteer units. Vermont fielded 17 infantry regiments, one
cavalry regiment, three light artillery batteries, one heavy artillery
company, three companies of sharpshooters, and two companies of
frontier cavalry. Instead of replacing units as they were depleted,
Vermont regularly provided recruits to bring the units in the field
back up to normal strength.
Nearly 5,000 Vermonters served in
other states' units, in the United States Army or the United States
Navy. The 54th Massachusetts Infantry (Colored) included 66 Vermont
blacks; a total of 166 black Vermonters served out of a population of
709 in the state. Vermonters, if not Vermont units, participated in
every major battle of the war.
Vermonters suffered a total of
1,832 men killed or mortally wounded in battle; another 3,362 died of
disease, in prison or from other causes, for a total loss of 5,194.
More than 2,200 Vermonters were taken prisoner during the war, and 615
of them died in, or as a result of, their imprisonment. Among the most
famous of the Vermont units were the 1st Vermont Brigade, the 2nd
Vermont Brigade, and the 1st Vermont Cavalry.
A large proportion of Vermont’s state and national-level politicians for several decades after the Civil War were veterans.
The northernmost land action of the war, the St. Albans Raid, took place in Vermont.
Postbellum era and beyond
The
two decades following the end of the American Civil War (1864–1885) saw
both economic expansion and contraction, and fairly dramatic social
change.
Mills in Lowell, Massachusetts began staffing up.
Recruiters were sent out all over New England. Initially they found
ample workers from new widows, single parent heads of family. This
demand was filled by August 1865, and recruiting Americans from Lowell
ceased abruptly.
Vermont's system of railroads expanded and was
linked to national systems, agricultural output and export soared and
incomes increased. But Vermont also felt the effects of recessions and
financial panics, particularly the Panic of 1873 which resulted in a
substantial exodus of young Vermonters. The transition in thinking
about the rights of citizens, first brought to a head by the 1854
Vermont Senate report on slavery, and later Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address in changing how citizens perceived civil rights, fueled
agitation for women's suffrage. The first election in which women were
allowed to vote was on December 18, 1880, when women were granted
limited suffrage and were first allowed to vote in town elections, and
then in state legislative races.
The twentieth century
In
1902, Vermonters approved a law for local option on the sale of
alcoholic beverages, countermanding the prior law of 1853 which banned
them entirely. That year 94 towns approved the sale of alcoholic
beverages locally. The number of approving towns fell each year until
there were only 18 in 1917, shortly before national prohibition became
law.
In 1923, the state passed a law limiting the regular workweek of women and children to 58 hours.
Large-scale
flooding occurred in early November 1927. During this incident, 85
people died, 84 of them in Vermont. Another flood occurred in 1973,
when the flood caused the death of two people and millions of dollars
in property damage.
A eugenics project apparently targeted
Indians, Indian-French Canadians, and Afro-Americans in the state for
forced sterilization between 1931 and 1936.
94 Vermonters died fighting the Korean War.
In
1964, the US Supreme Court forced “one-man, one-vote” redistricting on
Vermont, giving cities an equitable share of votes in both houses for
the entire country. Until that time, counties were often represented by
area in state senates and were often unsympathetic to urban problems
requiring increased taxes.
On April 25, 2000, as a result of the
Vermont Supreme Court's decision in Baker v. Vermont, the Vermont
General Assembly passed and Governor Howard Dean signed into law
H.0847, which provided the state-sanctioned benefits of marriage to gay
and lesbian couples in the form of civil unions. Controversy over the
civil unions bill was a central issue in the subsequent 2000 elections.
In
2007, with three-quarters of the state opposing the Iraq War, the state
nevertheless had the highest rate of deaths there in the nation. This
was due to volunteers and participation by the Vermont National Guard.
During
the late-2000s recession, state median household income dropped
furthest, or second furthest, depending on how it is computed, of any
state in the nation; from -3.2% or -10%, depending on whether a
two-year or three-year moving average was used.
A political history
The political scene 1791–1830
Vermont
preferred the Jeffersonian Party in its early existence, which became
the Democratic Party in the early 1820s. Along with many other
dissidents Vermont stopped voting Democratic, reacting to the
personality of Andrew Jackson, and not for objective reasons. The state
voted Anti-Jackson, Whig, then Republican Party. It did so consistently
until 1962.
The Vermont legislature chose presidential electors
through the general election of 1824. Vermont citizens first started
voting directly for presidential electors in 1828.
Politically upward mobility 1830–1916
Politicians
aspiring to statewide office in Vermont normally had to be nominated at
a state convention or “caucus.” Factions dominated these caucuses. Some
of these were family. A look at the list of Governors, Senators and
Representatives over time shows the Chittendens, Fairbanks, Proctors,
and Smiths. Nomination was tantamount to election. The state
legislature chose US senators until 1913. Governors normally served
just one term of two years. Up to six seats in the US House of
Representatives gave ambitious politicians an ample stage for their
talent.
The Green Mountains effectively split Vermont in two.
Culturally the eastern Vermonters were often descended from immigrants
from New Hampshire. Western Vermonters often had their roots in New
York. Recognizing this as a source of potential problems, politicians
began following an unwritten “mountain rule,” rotating the Lieutenant
Governor and Governor residing in opposite sides of the state.
The
first election in which women were allowed to vote was on December 18,
1880, when women were granted limited suffrage and were allowed to vote
in school board elections.
Primaries 1916–1946
General
annoyance with this system of selecting leadership by a few people, led
to statewide primaries in 1916. Down to only one congressional seat to
compete for, Governors started trying to serve two terms, beginning
with Governor Weeks in 1927. This worked until World War II.
The state highway system was created in 1931.
Senator
Ernest Gibson died in 1940. The governor appointed the late Senator's
son, Ernest W. Gibson, Jr.to fill out the remainder of his term. With
little prior political experience on his own merits, Gibson did not run
for reelection. Instead he devoted himself to preparing the state for
war. He served in the South Pacific and emerged as a colonel. There was
a tsunami in 1946 in American politics. Returning veterans were
popular. Gibson ran an unprecedented campaign against the incumbent
Governor, Mortimer R. Proctor, and ousted him in the primary.
Interregnum — Liberal Republicans prevail 1946–1962
Gibson
was the first of the liberal Republicans. While conservatives like
Harold Arthur and Lee Emerson were able to get elected to Governor,
they seem, in retrospect, to be transitory figures.
A "normal"
path to the top became: Representative, Speaker of the House, Senator,
Speaker Pro Tem, Lieutenant Governor, Governor, US Representative, and
US Senator.
In 1962, Philip Hoff was elected Governor, the first Democrat since before the Civil War.
Democratic dominance 1962– current
The
demographics of the state had changed. In 1960, 25% of the population
was born outside the state. Most of these immigrants were from
Democratic states and brought their voting inclinations with them.
Anticipating this change, the Republicans conducted a massive
free-for-all in 1958, the last good chance many of them saw to capture
a congressional seat. They were wrong. Democrat William H. Meyer won,
the first from his party in 102 years.
While the climate had
changed, the legislature had not. With one representative per town and
two senators per county, the rural areas dominated and set the agenda
much to the frustration of urban areas, particularly Chittenden County.
In 1964, the US Supreme Court forced “one-man, one-vote” redistricting
on Vermont, giving cities an equitable share of votes in both houses.
Unlike
yesteryear, no party nominee can be assured of election. The unwritten
“two term” rule has been jettisoned. Governors usually serve as long as
they can, not being able to guarantee that their policies will be
continued after they leave office. Vermonters have alternated parties
in the Governor’s office since 1962. Democratic governors have served
longer.
Infrastructure history
Transportation around this
mountainous state was a challenge to the original colonists. While this
challenge has been met in the current era by turnpikes and limited rail
service, public transportation for the majority of Vermonters has often
remained elusive.
In 2008, the Vermont Transit Lines, a
subsidiary of Greyhound Lines went out of business. It had begun
operating in 1973. Limited service continued under the direct aegis of
Greyhound. This has been replaced by subsidized regional NGO
corporations which provide limited service for most, but adequate
service for those needing medical treatment.


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