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About Londonderry
*Champion
Fire House
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South Derry Village from Melendy Hill |

Main Street, Londonderry Village
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LONDONDERRY
This article was written by Patricia Wiley and
Shirley Twitchell
for the Londonderry Bicentennial Celebration in 1991.
The
Town of Londonderry is situated in the northwest corner of Windham County,
bounded on the north by Landgrove and Weston, east by Windham; south
by Jamaica, and west by Winhall and Landgrove.
Londonderry was first chartered in 1770 by New York to one Col. James
Rogers and was known as Kent which then included what is now Windham.
The town was again chartered by act of the new Vermont Legislature on
April 20, 1780. In this charter the township was named Londonderry after
Londonderry, N.H.
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Thompsonburg Corner , Londonderry
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The population in 1770 was 28 people and by 1790 the population increased
to 362 inhabitants. In 1860, the high population of the town reached
1,367 due to increased interest in manufacturing and greater job diversity.
The population gradually decreased to 898 in 1960. At this time the
vacation/ski industry began to flourish and the census hit a new peak
in 1980 of 1510. The population in 2000 was around 1709.
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For many years, the matter of building up the West River was discussed
by all the towns up the valley, in 1867, a charter was granted to “the
West River Railroad Company” to build a railroad from Brattleboro
to Jamaica.
Amendments and additions to the original act extended the line to go
through Londonderry. After railroad meetings in all the towns along
the proposed route, aid was given and many private subscriptions of
stock were made. Londonderry bought 232 shares of capitol stock for
the sum of $24,000.
The last rail of the West River Railroad was laid in South Londonderry,
its northern terminus, in 1880. It was run by the Central Vermont Railway
Co. until the flood of 1927. It was known by everyone as: 36 miles of
trouble.”
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South
Londonderry Old Bridge
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South Londonderry Village |

South Londonderry 'New' Bridge
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George T. Shanks better known as “Sifter John,” established
the weekly newspaper, The Londonderry Sifter, in 1883. He was the owner
and editor until 1903, although the paper was still published until
the middle 1920’s. During his ownership of the Sifter he was not
afraid to take on politicians or the railroad which, he thought, ruled
the state of Vermont. Being an inexperienced editor at the time he was
jailed for his explosive efforts and nearly ruined financially. But
he was never silenced nor was his paper suppressed.
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Champion
Fire Company with Pumper |

Phoenix Fire Station, Londonderry |
Through
the early years of the town our industries were: saw mills, grist mills,
machine shops, carriage shops, a tannery, chair stock and marble works.
Today we basically have a tourist-oriented economy.
The biggest things that have happened in the town would probably be
the 1927, 1938 and the 1973 floods; they would be high on the list along
with the crash of two FB-111’s on a training mission over the
village of South Londonderry in February 1975.
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