The Green Mountain Chronicles was a radio show produced by the Vermont Historical Society in the 1980s. We're re-releasing it today for you to listen to at home.
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/railroads-1989By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/school-consolidation-farewell-to-the-one-room-schoolhouse-1986By vermonthistory
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Episode 49: The First Vermonters, the Abenaki
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/first-vermonters-the-abenakis-1976By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/act-250-1970By vermonthistory
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Episode 47: Back to the Land: Communes in Vermont
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In the 1960s and early 1970s, Vermont acquired a reputation for being a haven for hippies and a hotbed of counter-cultural communal living. There was some truth to that. But the communes and alternative life-styles of that generation had a deeper history than most outsiders—and most of the commune residents themselves—knew. And, like their predeces…
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/vt-ny-youth-project-1968By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/aiken-formula-myth-and-reality-1966By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/dowsing-in-danville-1961By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/democrats-rising-1958By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/hi-tech-comes-to-vermont-1957By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/consuela-northrop-bailey-1954By vermonthistory
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The most noteworthy expression of McCarthyism in Vermont involved the University of Vermont’s 1953 firing of Professor Alex B. Novikoff for the “crime” of invoking the Fifth Amendment before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/case-of-alex-b-novikoff-1953…
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/maple-sugaring-1947By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/town-bands-1946By vermonthistory
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/senator-ralph-flanders-1946By vermonthistory
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Episode 35: Electricity Comes to Rural Vermont
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For more information on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/turning-on-the-lights-1943By vermonthistory
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Even though the United States did not officially enter World War II until December 8, 1941, Vermonters had been involved—mostly indirectly—in the war effort for over a year. On September 1940, the Secretary of War ordered units of the Vermont National Guard into active duty; and in October—following the enactment by Congress of the Selective Servic…
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Episode 32: Fighting Silicosis, Dust Control in the Granite Industry
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For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/fighting-silicosis-dust-control-in-granite-industry-1937By vermonthistory
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Episode 31: The OWLS, Vermont's Women Legislators
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The Vermont Women's Legislative Caucus began its political life as the Vermont Chapter of the Order of Women Legislators, the OWLs. In June 1936, the women then in the Vermont legislature met at the Fletcher Farm in Proctor for a two day organizational meeting. Following the lead of Julia Emery of Connecticut, founder of the first OWLs group in the…
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For more background on this episode, visit: https://vermonthistory.org/legislative-reappointment-1965By vermonthistory
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