The Man Who Gave Birth to the Northeast Kingdom – George Aiken
| by Scott Wheeler How did the Northeast Kingdom get its name? Without a doubt this is the question that I’m asked most often by residents and visitors to the region. Although most people with strong ties to the Kingdom take pride in the region, a region that encompasses Orleans, Essex, and Caledonia counties—a mass of about 1,313,710 acres of land and water—many people don’t know how the region received the romantic sounding name. |
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| By most accounts the first time that the phrase, “Northeast Kingdom,” was uttered in a public forum, and possibly at all, was in 1949 during a meeting in the stately Darling Inn on Depot Street in Lyndonville. The man credited with giving birth to the Kingdom, or at least its name, is one of Vermont’s most beloved politicians, Vermont Governor turned U.S. Senator, the late George D. Aiken. The coining of the name came at a good time for a region struggling to find an identity and to market itself to the rest of the world in an attempt to bring tourists and businesses to this historically poorest section of the state. According to Lola Aiken, the late senator’s widow, a woman who I respect tremendously, the phrase simply rolled off her husband’s tongue at the meeting and was not a preplanned publicity stunt for the region. Instead, she said, her husband was moved by the rugged, yet beautiful, environment of the Northeast Kingdom. |
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“He said it just came out of his mouth one day,” Mrs. Aiken explained. “After he thought about it, he thought the name was perfect for the area.”The Vermont farm boy, who was born in Dummerston, Vermont, but grew up in Putney, Vermont, grew up to become governor of Vermont and later a U.S. senator. He was one of this country’s most powerful and respected leaders.
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