List of National Historic Landmarks in Vermont

This is a list of National Historic Landmarks in Vermont. There are 18 National Historic Landmarks in Vermont.

This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts that are National Historic Landmarks in Vermont. The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below) may be seen in a Google map by clicking on "Map of all coordinates".[1]

[2] Landmark name Image Date designated[3] Location County Description
1 Brown Bridge
A light brown wooden covered bridge seen from one side of the river it crosses, slightly below the portal. It is surrounded by green tree branches on either side.
August 25, 2014
(#74000250)
Shrewsbury
43°33′58″N 72°55′10″W / 43.56618°N 72.91949°W / 43.56618; -72.91949 (Brown Bridge)
Rutland 1880 covered bridge is outstanding example of Town lattice truss; may have been last bridge built by longtime bridgewright Nicholas Powers.
2 Calvin Coolidge Homestead District
The Coolidge Homestead, 1976.
June 23, 1965
(#66000794)
Plymouth Notch
43°32′08″N 72°43′18″W / 43.5356°N 72.721639°W / 43.5356; -72.721639 (Calvin Coolidge Homestead District)
Windsor Birthplace and family home of President Calvin Coolidge.
3 Robert Frost Farm
Robert Frost Cabin
May 23, 1968
(#68000046)
Ripton
43°57′59″N 73°00′17″W / 43.96639°N 73.00472°W / 43.96639; -73.00472 (Robert Frost Farm)
Addison Homestead of author Robert Frost, now owned by Middlebury College.
4 George Perkins Marsh Boyhood Home
George Perkins Marsh Boyhood Home
June 11, 1967
(#67000023)
Woodstock
43°37′39″N 72°31′06″W / 43.6275°N 72.5183°W / 43.6275; -72.5183 (George Perkins Marsh Boyhood Home)
Windsor Boyhood home of George Perkins Marsh, an American diplomat and philologist, an early environmentalist. Now in the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park.
5 Justin S. Morrill Homestead
Justin S. Morrill Homestead
September 22, 1960
(#66000795)
Strafford
43°51′40″N 72°22′33″W / 43.8610°N 72.3759°W / 43.8610; -72.3759 (Justin S. Morrill Homestead)
Orange Gothic Revival home of Justin Smith Morrill, Vermont representative and senator known for the 1862 and 1890 Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Acts.
6 Mount Independence
Mount Independence
November 28, 1972
(#71000079)
Orwell
43°49′35″N 73°22′49″W / 43.82639°N 73.38028°W / 43.82639; -73.38028 (Mount Independence)
Addison Site of Fort Independence, an American Revolutionary War fortification built opposite Fort Ticonderoga.
7 Naulakha (Rudyard Kipling House)
Naulakha (Rudyard Kipling House)
November 4, 1993
(#79000231)
Dummerston
42°53′55″N 72°33′51″W / 42.8986°N 72.56417°W / 42.8986; -72.56417 (Naulakha (Rudyard Kipling House))
Windham Home where Rudyard Kipling wrote The Jungle Book.
8 Robbins and Lawrence Armory and Machine Shop
Robbins and Lawrence Armory and Machine Shop
November 13, 1966
(#66000796)
Windsor
43°28′22″N 72°23′23″W / 43.4727°N 72.3897°W / 43.4727; -72.3897 (Robbins and Lawrence Armory and Machine Shop)
Windsor Erected in 1846, this site is an excellent example of 19th-century American industrial architecture.
9 Rockingham Meeting House
Rockingham Meeting House
May 16, 2000
(#79000232)
Rockingham
43°11′16″N 72°29′13″W / 43.1877°N 72.48694°W / 43.1877; -72.48694 (Rockingham Meeting House)
Windham A rare 18th century New England meetinghouse of the "second period" type.
10 Rokeby
Rokeby
December 9, 1997
(#74000201)
Ferrisburg
44°13′14″N 73°14′17″W / 44.2205°N 73.2380°W / 44.2205; -73.2380 (Rokeby)
Addison This Robinson family farmstead is significant for its role in the Underground Railroad.
11 Round Church
Round Church
June 19, 1996
(#74000355)
Richmond
44°23′56″N 72°59′58″W / 44.3989°N 72.9994°W / 44.3989; -72.9994 (Round Church)
Chittenden The Round Church, built in 1812–1813, is a rare, well-preserved example of a sixteen-sided meetinghouse.
12 Shelburne Farms
Shelburne Farms
January 3, 2001
(#80000330)
Shelburne
44°23′32″N 73°15′26″W / 44.3922°N 73.2572°W / 44.3922; -73.2572 (Shelburne Farms)
Chittenden Created in 1886 by Dr. William Seward Webb and Eliza Vanderbilt Webb as a model agricultural estate.
13 St. Johnsbury Athenaeum
St. Johnsbury Athenaeum
June 19, 1996
(#96000970)
St. Johnsbury
44°24′39″N 72°01′08″W / 44.4107°N 72.0189°W / 44.4107; -72.0189 (St. Johnsbury Athenaeum)
Caledonia Significant due to its architecture, its American paintings and books from its original role as a public library and free art gallery, and its funding by Horace Fairbanks, manufacturer of the world's first platform scale.
14 Socialist Labor Party Hall
Socialist Labor Party Hall
May 16, 2000
(#98001267)
Barre
44°11′54″N 72°30′27″W / 44.1983°N 72.5075°W / 44.1983; -72.5075 (Socialist Labor Party Hall)
Washington A place where socialist, anarchist, and labor anarchist politics were debated.
15 Stellafane Observatory
Stellafane Observatory
December 20, 1989
(#77000107)
North Springfield
43°16′34″N 72°31′09″W / 43.2761°N 72.5193°W / 43.2761; -72.5193 (Stellafane Observatory)
Windsor Contains original clubhouse of the Springfield Telescope Makers, Inc. (1924), and the first large optical telescope (1930) built and owned by that kind of amateur society.
16 Ticonderoga (Side-paddle-wheel Lakeboat)
January 28, 1964
(#66000797)
Shelburne
44°22′30″N 73°13′53″W / 44.3749°N 73.2315°W / 44.3749; -73.2315 (Ticonderoga (Side-paddle-wheel Lakeboat))
Chittenden 220-foot (67 m) steamboat built in Shelburne in 1906.
17 Vermont Statehouse
Vermont Statehouse
December 30, 1970
(#70000739)
Montpelier
44°15′37″N 72°34′51″W / 44.2604°N 72.5808°W / 44.2604; -72.5808 (Vermont Statehouse)
Washington The capitol and seat of the state's legislative branch of government.
18 Emma Willard House
Emma Willard House
December 21, 1965
(#66000798)
Middlebury
44°00′20″N 73°10′29″W / 44.0056°N 73.1747°W / 44.0056; -73.1747 (Emma Willard House)
Addison Home of Emma Willard, an influential pioneer in the development of women's education in the United States.

Former landmark

Landmark name
Image
Year listed
Locality
County
Description
Robert Frost Farm, "The Gully" Designated 1968, withdrawn 1986 South Shaftsbury Bennington This property was the residence of poet Robert Frost between 1929 and 1938. Many of the poems from his Pulitzer Prize-winning Collected Poems (1930) and A Further Range (1937) were written here. The property remained in the Frost family until 1963. Extensive renovations to the buildings after 1979 led the Park Service to withdraw the landmark designation.[4]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Historic Landmarks in Vermont.

References

  1. The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For about 1% of NRIS original coordinates, experience has shown that one or both coordinates are typos or otherwise extremely far off; some corrections may have been made. A more subtle problem causes many locations to be off by up to 150 yards, depending on location in the country: most NRIS coordinates were derived from tracing out latitude and longitudes off of USGS topographical quadrant maps created under the North American Datum of 1927, which differs from the current, highly accurate WGS84 GPS system used by most on-line maps. Chicago is about right, but NRIS longitudes in Washington are higher by about 4.5 seconds, and are lower by about 2.0 seconds in Maine. Latitudes differ by about 1.0 second in Florida. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
  2. Numbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
  3. The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
  4. "Withdrawal of National Historic Landmark Designation: Robert Frost Farm". National Park Service. Retrieved 2012-03-12.
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