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A History of Vermont

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About this book:

A History of Vermont A History of Vermont invites readers on a sweeping journey through the forces that have shaped one of America’s most distinctive states. Beginning with a billion‑year geological saga, the book reveals how ancient collisions, tropical seas, and mile‑thick ice sheets carved the Green Mountains and laid the foundation for every human story that followed. Readers will walk alongside the first Paleo‑Indian hunters, witness the rise of the Abenaki societies, and feel the dramatic impact of Samuel de Champlain’s arquebus shot that ignited a century‑long struggle between European empires and Native nations.

From those early roots, the narrative unfolds into the tumultuous colonial era, where competing land grants from New Hampshire and New York sparked the formation of the Green Mountain Boys and their legendary defiance under Ethan Allen. The book details how that same spirit of independence led to the audacious creation of the Republic of Vermont—a fourteen‑year sovereign experiment that banned adult slavery, instituted universal male suffrage, and minted its own currency before joining the Union as the fourteenth state. Chapters on statehood show how Vermont’s pioneering constitution guided early democracy, education, and a fierce localism that still echoes in town meetings today.

Readers will then trace the state’s economic metamorphoses: the sheep boom that once turned hillsides into endless pastures, the dairy revolution that gave Vermont its iconic red barns and black‑and‑white cows, and the industrial surge of railroads, granite quarries, and precision machine tools that attracted waves of Irish, French‑Canadian, Italian, and Scottish immigrants. The book explores how those newcomers reshaped Vermont’s cities, labor movements, and cultural landscape, setting the stage for the Progressive Era reforms, the birth of the ski industry, and the counter‑culture influx of the 1960s and 70s that sparked modern environmentalism and a new political consciousness.

The latter half of the volume brings the story into the modern age, chronicling Vermont’s remarkable political transformation from a Republican stronghold to a progressive bastion, its pioneering role in civil unions and marriage equality, and the rise of high‑tech enterprises alongside a thriving agricultural renaissance of artisanal cheese, craft beer, and farm‑to‑table dining. Finally, the book confronts the challenges of the twenty‑first century—an aging population, opioid crisis, housing affordability, and climate change—while celebrating the enduring tension between freedom and unity that continues to define what it means to be a Vermonter. Through vivid storytelling and deep research, readers will gain a nuanced appreciation of how a small, mountainous state has repeatedly punched above its weight, leaving an indelible mark on the nation’s history.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Vermont's journey from independent republic (1777-1791) to the 14th state, including its radical constitution that first banned adult slavery in North America.
  • The state's economic evolution through boom-bust cycles: sheep farming, dairy industry, marble/granite quarrying, ski tourism, and modern artisanal food and tech sectors.
  • Vermont's role as a national leader in social progress, from abolitionism and Underground Railroad participation to pioneering civil unions and marriage equality.
  • The political transformation from a century-long Republican stronghold to one of America's most progressive states, driven by immigration waves and cultural shifts.
  • How Vermont's enduring identity balances fiercely independent traditions with community unity, shaped by its landscape and ongoing dialogue between freedom and unity.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for history enthusiasts, students, and anyone seeking to understand how a small state has consistently punched above its weight in American history. It will particularly resonate with Vermonters wanting to explore their state's complex identity, educators looking for comprehensive regional history material, and readers interested in the interplay between independence, social progress, and economic adaptation. Those fascinated by how local movements influence national change—from abolitionism to marriage equality—will find Vermont's story especially compelling. The book also serves anyone curious about how geography shapes culture and how communities reinvent themselves across centuries.

Author:

George Andrews

Published By:

Ephyia Publishing


Date Published:

May 24, 2026

Word Count:

46,669 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 16 minutes

Sample:

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