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The Dorset Village Historic District encompasses a significant portion of the village center of Dorset, Vermont.Centered at the junction of Church Street, Kent Hill Road, and Vermont Route 30, the village was developed between the late 18th and early 20th centuries, and has a number of well-preserved unusual features, including sidewalks of marble from local quarries.
Central Vermont Marketplace Berlin, Vermont: Vermont 330,000 6 Kohl's, Walmart 1987 Heidenberg Properties 3 Green Mountain Saint Johnsbury, Vermont: Vermont 195,400 Ocean State Job Lot: 1974 4 The Mall at Rockingham Park: Salem, New Hampshire: New Hampshire: 1,024,159 [1] 144 JCPenney, Macy's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Cinemark: 1991 Simon ...
Dorset is a town in Bennington County, Vermont, United States.The population was 2,133 at the 2020 census. [3] Dorset is famous for being the location of Cephas Kent's Inn, where four meetings of the Convention that signed the Dorset Accords led to the independent Vermont Republic and future statehood.
Built between 1971 and 1973, it was an unofficial Eaton Centre.It is a joint venture of Cemp Investments, Toronto Dominion Bank and T. Eaton Company Limited. [4] The Pacific Centre was home to an Eaton's department store, succeeded by Sears Canada after 2002 and vacated in the fourth quarter of 2012. [5]
Let's move to Vermont and make cookie cutters with my mom In the late 1990s, Ben Clark and his wife were living in Annapolis, Maryland. Clark was a mechanical engineer working at Black+Decker.
Country Curtains was a retail home curtain business founded in 1956 by Jane and Jack Fitzpatrick in Whitman, Massachusetts. They started their business from their dining room table selling unbleached narrow muslin curtains. It was Jack’s idea to sell unbleached muslin ruffled curtains through the mail, reminiscent of their Vermont heritage.
Value City Department Stores was an American department store chain with 113 locations. It was founded in 1917 by Ephraim Schottenstein, a travelling salesman in central Ohio. The store was an off-price retailer that sold clothing, jewelry, and home goods below the manufacturer suggested retail price. The chain focused on buyout and closeout ...
Owned by the Dunlaps Store chain based in Texas in its last years (starting around 1993), and operated as "PMB, Inc.--a Division of Dunlaps", the chain found itself flustered with new competition as many regional and national chains started to open units in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont communities where Porteous previously had carved out its niche in the mid-market department store business.