- National Geographic Recognizes the Northeast Kingdom
- A New Lighthouse Rolls Into Newport
- Morgan, Vermont, Home of Monk Besaw - A Man Who Makes New Things Old
- The Man Who Gave Birth to the Northeast Kingdom – George Aiken
- Painting by Recently Deceased Jay Peak Pioneer Donated to Jay Peak Ski and Summer Resort
- Jay Peak Pioneer Walter Foeger Passes Away
- Jay Peak – A Dream Come True
- Burke Is More Than a Mountain — It Is a Community
- Recording the History of the Clyde River Fishery
- Winston Carbonneau- Coming to Grips with the Vietnam War
- The Boulders of Lake Willoughby
- Remembering the Famous Fur Bearing Trout of Lake Memphremagog
- Northeast Kingdom Sways to the Sound of Reggae
- The Warmth of a Woodstove (in more ways than one)
- Scuba Diver, Historian, Ecologist, and Monster Hunter – Remembering Jacques Boisvert
- Polar Bear Rescued by Derby Man
- Charles Francis Adams
- The Kingdom Remembers Supreme Court Justice , William Rehnquist
- Salmon Through the Lens of a Camera
- Basket Maker Shares Traditional Native American Skills
- How to Ride a Cow - An Instruction Manual Written by a Farm Girl
- Words of Wisdom about Vermont’s Seasons
- The Agony of Defeat in the Face of Mud Season
- Vermont Through the Eyes of a Stranger
- Lyndonville: Once Vermont’s Toughest Town
- Vermont Northland Journal Recognized by Vermont Legislature
- The 60th Anniversary of the End of World War II in Europe - A Newport Woman Looks Back
- Sozap—Indian Joe, The Friendly Indian
- Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s Ancestry Rooted in Coventry, Vermont
- Movies Made in Vermont - Disappearances 2006
"After more than five years in development, we're delighted to present Disappearances, the third in our trilogy of Vermont "frontier films" now in its final stages. Bolstered by a $35,000 production grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and a group of heroic Frontier Partners, LP investors, we shot the film in April/May 2005 with extraordinary community support and completed post-production early 2006."
- Prohibition Along the Northern Vermont Border Clarence Morse - "Good Money in Bad Times"
- What About Lake Memphremagog?
- Vermont Prohibition News Articles
- Newport Man Remembers Prohibition
- Trials of a Pioneer of Brighton Captured in a Letter
- Jay Peak Ski and Summer Resort Celebrates 50 Years
- Remembering the Spanish Influenza Epidemic of 1918
- Remembering Montgomery Ward - A Newport, Vermont Icon
Newport’s Main Street was once the shopping mecca of Orleans County. Shoppers flocked from other communities and the hills to shop in the many stores that lined the street—stores including several chain stores such as JC Penny, Woolworth’s, JJ. Newberry Co., and Grants. One of the longest surviving stores was Montgomery Ward.
- A Unique Look at Phish’s Last Festival
- Clarence Morse - "Good Money in Bad Times"
- Memories of a Bird’s-eye View of the Clyde River
- Remembering the Flood of 1927
- Summertime: When the Iceman Came
- Memories of a Bygone Era on the Clyde River
- Philip, Abenaki Indian Chief, and Philip’s Grant (Orleans and Essex Counties)
- Surviving Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom’s Brutal Winter Weather
- Memories of Fish and Wildlife Warden Normand Moreau: From Both Sides of the Law
- Lurking In the Depths of the Lake
- Memphre' Is Dead
- Live Free or Die in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom
- Improvements all around, except for the Northeast Kingdom
- Slipperyskin
- Ice Fishing in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. It’s More than about Catching Fish
more stories!
For more info contact:
Scott Wheeler, Derby, VT.
E-mail: swheeler@together.net
Vermont's Northland Journal
|