The Brattleboro Historical Society Podcast
Brattleboro may have had a few men at the first Vermont public reading of the Declaration of Independence. This is the story...
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500 episodios
BHS e575-Israel Smith and Vermont Sufferers
Beginning in the 1780's, many "Vermont Sufferers" moved to Bainbridge, NY. Many of these transplants were Revolutionary War veterans from Brattleboro, Guilford and Dummerston. Here's their story...
BHS e574-Declaration of Independence and Vermont
BHS e573-Susannah Arms and the Revolution 1700's
Susannah Willard Arms has been identified as providing "Patriotic Service" during the American Revolution by both the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution. This is her story...
BHS e572-How The Creamery Bridge Got Its Name
The Centerville Covered Wooden Bridge was built in 1879. Eight years later the Brattleboro Creamery Association constructed a plant nearby that converted local dairy cream into butter. The business operated until 1911 and produced more than 200,000 pounds of butter a year.
BHS e571-Geographic Influences on Early Brattleboro
Long before European powers fixed their gaze on the Connecticut River Valley, the region that would become Brattleboro was part of a broader Abenaki homeland. The Connecticut River and its tributaries—especially the West River and Whetstone Brook—were more than waterways; they were transportation corridors, food sources, and cultural anchors...here's the story...
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