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The Brattleboro Reformer is the third-largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Vermont.With a weekday circulation of just over 10,000, [2] it is behind the Burlington Free Press and the Rutland Herald, respectively.
List of Vermont newspapers, as of 1842, in: Zadock Thompson. History Of Vermont , Natural, Civil And Statistical, In Three Parts, With A Few Map Of The State, And 200 Engravings. Burlington, VT: Goodrich, 1842
Brattleboro Retreat in 1844. The Brattleboro Retreat was founded in 1834 as the Vermont Asylum for the Insane through a $10,000 bequest left by Anna Hunt Marsh for the establishment of a psychiatric hospital that would exist independently and in perpetuity for the welfare of the mentally disordered. [4]
The Rutland Herald, previously called the Rutland Daily Herald, is the second largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Vermont (after The Burlington Free Press).It is published in Rutland with its source of news geared towards the southern part of the state, along with the Brattleboro Reformer and the Bennington Banner.
Brattleboro (/ ˈ b r æ t əl b ʌr oʊ /), [4] originally Brattleborough, is a town in Windham County, Vermont, United States, located about 10 miles (16 km) north of the Massachusetts state line at the confluence of Vermont's West River and the Connecticut River.
This time, a group of local business people from Pittsfield, Massachusetts who wanted to reclaim the Berkshire Eagle as a local paper, purchased the papers’ parent company, known as New England Newspapers, Inc. In May of 2021 the New England Newspapers sold Manchester Journal, Brattleboro Reformer and Bennington to Vermont News and Media LLC
F. Elliott Barber was born in Brattleboro, Vermont on June 8, 1912. [1] He was the son of attorney F. Elliott Barber Sr., and the nephew of Herbert G. Barber, who also served as Vermont Attorney General. [2]
The Brattleboro Reformer described the plan as, “encompassing the entire Haystack development in a central village, includes a hotel, theater, shops, lodges, motels, clubs and various year round recreational facilities. [15] In July 1966, Jack Manton was replaced as the area's GM by William Palumbo.