Kirby, Vermont - Town History
courtesy of the Center For Rural Studies
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| A Few Characteristics Burke, Victory, Concord, St. Johnsbury and Lyndon border Kirby, VT in Caledonia County. The Town is located in the northeast section of Vermont, known as the Northeast Kingdom. Kirby consists of approximately 15,000 acres, about half the size of a typical Vermont town. It is located at an altitude of 1260', and is located at 71E 54N W, 44E 28N N. The population peaked in 1840 at 520 residents. The current population is 384, and Kirby has 156 year round housing units and 46 seasonal units (U.S. Census of Housing and Population Estimates, 1995). Kirby has the shape of an arrowhead; a result of being formed from a piece of Burke and a town called Hopkinsville. Kirby is a farming community and has no trading center or village. |
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Civic Structure
The closest thing to a village in Kirby is an area in the extreme southern part of town where two roads coming from Concord meet at a kind of double four corners. In the mid-1800s, this hamlet had a church, a school, a cemetery and a few houses. The cemetery is still there as well as the empty schoolhouse. In the northern part of town there is another cemetery and the Town Office Building. At one time, where two or more roads converged, the road signs indicated whose house was in which direction, rather than the location of villages. There are several named places in Kirby: Sugarhill, Mud Hollow, North and South Kirby. The residents receive their mail from the Lyndonville, Concord or the East Burke Post Offices. Telephone service is from Lyndonville, Concord, or St. Johnsbury. Electricity is from Central Vermont Public Service Co., or the Lyndonville Electric Company.
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