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VT Route 191 – "Access Road", connects I-91, Exit 27, to the city of Newport; U.S. Route 5 and VT Route 105 are concurrent through much of their routes through the city. Interstate 91 is the nearest interstate highway, and runs through the neighboring town of Derby. Two exits (for VT Route 191 and for US 5/VT 105) provide access to Newport.
Newport is a town in Orleans County, Vermont, United States. The population was 1,526 at the 2020 census. [6] The town is referred to by the United States Postal Service and the media as Newport Center, the name of the main settlement of the town. Newport is also the name of the neighboring city of Newport.
Newport, Vermont may refer to: Newport (town), Vermont; Newport (city), Vermont This page was last edited on 29 December 2019, at 14:14 (UTC). Text is available under ...
In 1918, the central village of the town of Newport was united with the adjacent village of West Derby to form the city of Newport. [ 2 ] The city's main downtown area remains that of the original village, set on a small peninsula jutting eastward into the southernmost finger of the lake.
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Newport Center is the primary village and a census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Newport, Orleans County, Vermont, United States. As of the 2020 census, it had a population of 231, [2] out of 1,526 in the town of Newport. The CDP is in northern Orleans County, north of the geographic center of the town.
The Orleans County Courthouse and Jail Complex is a historic government facility on Main Street in the city of Newport, Vermont, the shire town of Orleans County.The complex includes a fine Romanesque courthouse built in 1886, a wood-frame jailer's quarters built in 1886 (now housing the sheriff's office), and a 1903 brick jail.
A. A. Earle published the Orleans Independent Standard in Irasburg from 1856 to 1869. He moved the paper to Barton and sold it to the Newport Express to form the Express and Standard. [1] There were various changes of editors and ownerships but by 1883, Camp again became sole owner and editor. [1] The paper retained this name until 1936. [2]