Home of Vermont’s Oldest Newspaper, USA.
Reverse side of the postcard.
More information
Home of Vermont’s Oldest Newspaper, USA.
Rutland city, seat of Rutland county, south-central Vermont, U.S. It lies between the Green Mountains and the Taconic Range on Otter Creek. In 1759 the site was an outpost on the military road built by the British general Sir Jeffrey Amherst across Vermont, connecting forts on Lake Champlain with the Connecticut River valley.
Chartered in 1761, the settlement was named for Rutland, Massachusetts. The first settlers, New England Yankees, arrived in 1770. During the American Revolution, Forts Rutland (originally Picket) and Ranger were built in the vicinity. Rutland was the capital of Vermont from 1784 to 1804. It is the home of Vermont’s oldest newspaper, the Rutland Daily Herald, published continuously since 1794.
After Rutland was incorporated as a village in 1847, railroad construction and marble quarrying stimulated growth, and about 1880 it was Vermont’s largest municipality. In 1886 the three surrounding marble-producing communities (Proctor, Rutland town, and West Rutland town) withdrew from Rutland, and since then Rutland city (incorporated in 1892) has been second in size to Burlington.
Object data
Title
Home of Vermont’s Oldest Newspaper, USA.
Artist
Fred S. Tolman.
Founder
Brockton, Massachusetts.
Date
1907.
Culture
USA.
Classification
Postcard.