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Townshend State Park is a state park in Townshend, Vermont. Embedded within Townshend State Forest , the park provides a camping facility and hiking trails for accessing Bald Mountain. The park's facilities were developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s, and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places for their well ...
Townshend State Forest covers 1,106 acres (4.48 km 2) in Townshend, Vermont in Windham County. [1] The forest is managed by the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation and surrounds 18-acre Townshend State Park, which hosts trails and camping facilities. Activities in the forest include hiking, snowshoeing and hunting.
Thetford Hill State Park: Thetford: Orange 362 146 Townshend State Park: Townshend: Windham 41 17 Underhill State Park: Underhill: Chittenden: 250 100 Waterbury Center State Park: Waterbury: Washington 90 36 Wilgus State Park: Weathersfield: Windsor: 89 36 Woodford State Park: Woodford: Bennington 401 162 Woods Island State Park: St. Albans ...
Townshend's Middle and High School was founded as a private seminary in October 1834, making it one of the oldest Vermont secondary schools. The first building was raised on the east side of the village common, and was named Leland Seminary after Aaron Leland, a Baptist preacher from Chester, Vermont.
The Simpsonville Stone Arch Bridge is a historic stone arch bridge, carrying Vermont Route 35 across Simpson Brook, north of the village of Townshend, Vermont. Built about 1909, it is one of a few surviving bridges in the region built by local mason James Otis Follett. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. [1]
The Follett Stone Arch Bridge Historic District encompasses a group of four stone arch bridges in southwestern Townshend, Vermont.All four bridges were built by James Otis Follett, a local self-taught mason, between 1894 and 1910, and represent the single greatest concentration of surviving bridges he built.
Scott Covered Bridge is a covered bridge spanning the West River in Townshend, Vermont.Built in 1870, it is at 277 feet (84 m) one of the longest covered bridges in the state (the West Dummerston Covered Bridge is longer by three feet), exhibiting three different forms of support: a Town lattice truss, kingpost trusses, and laminated arches.
West Townshend is an unincorporated village in Townshend, Vermont, United States. It is on the north side of a bend in the West River, upriver of the Townshend Dam. The entire village is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the West Townshend Village Historic District. Its ZIP codes are 05359 and 05353.