Ad
related to: townshend vt road map
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
James Otis Follett was a local farmer, who apparently learned the craft of bridge-building from books and his experiences as a road commissioner.Between 1894 and his death in 1911 he is estimated to have built at least forty stone arch bridges, most in Townshend and immediately adjacent communities.
The Simpsonville Bridge is located on Grafton Road (Vermont Route 35) about 2 miles (3.2 km) north of the village of Townshend, spanning Simpson Brook just east of the junction with Simpson Brook Road. The bridge is built out of rough-cut and roughly-course granite blocks, now mortared with a variety of materials.
Vermont Route 35 (VT 35) is a 21.220-mile-long (34.150 km) north–south state highway in southeastern Vermont, United States. It runs from an intersection with VT 30 in Townshend north to an intersection with VT 11 in Chester. The entirety of VT 35 is town-maintained.
To help navigate the damages, the Vermont 511 system providence real-time road conditions information. You can find a map here . Here's the list, by county, at of 8 a.m. on Friday morning.
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 West Townshend Stone Arch Bridge is located in the rural village of West Townshend, a few miles up the West River from the center of Townshend. It is located on Round Hill Road, a dead-end local road off Back Windham Road, just north of Vermont Route 30. The bridge is a single span stone arch, formed out of rough-cut and rubble stone, laid ...
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.
The First Congregational Church and Meetinghouse, also known as the Church of Christ and the Townshend Church, is a historic church at 34 Common Road in Townshend, Vermont. Built in 1790 and restyled in 1840, it is one of the oldest church buildings in continuous use in the state.