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The Waybury Inn is an inn at 457 East Main Street in Middlebury, Vermont, United States. The inn was built in 1810, and is one of the oldest operating traveler's accommodations in the state. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1] It is well known for its use in exterior shots of the Newhart television series.
The charter that created Middlebury dates from 1761 and the earliest settlement in East Middlebury dates from 1775 when Ebar Evarts cleared land for the construction of a tavern, the forerunner of today’s Waybury Inn. Jonathan Foot began the development of the area of the Middlebury River Gorge in 1790.
U.S. Route 7; also VT 30 and VT 125; also roughly inclusive of Weybridge, Seymour, North Pleasant, Seminary, Washington, Court, South, South Main, and College Sts 44°00′51″N 73°10′04″W / 44.0142°N 73.1678°W / 44.0142; -73.1678 ( Middlebury Village Historic
Rodolphe Meaker "Skip" Vallee (born 1960) is the former American Ambassador to Slovakia (2005-2008) and is “Chairman, CEO, and owner of R. L. Vallee, Inc., a Vermont-based energy company that includes the "Maplefields" convenience store chain, a top regional motor fuels distributorship, and an environmental remediation and consulting unit.
Joseph Battell (July 15, 1839 – February 23, 1915) was an American publisher and philanthropist from Middlebury, Vermont. [1] Battell is credited with preserving Vermont forest land including the land for Camel's Hump State Park.
Juniper Hill Farm stands atop the crest of a hill northwest of Windsor Vermont's main village and is accessed via a winding drive on the north side of Juniper Hill Road. The main house is a large U-shaped 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 -story wood-frame structure, oriented with the open end of the U to the north, facing terraced landscaping.