Rockingham Village Historic District

Rockingham Village Historic District

The Pleasant Valley Grange
Location Meeting House Rd., Rockingham Hill Rd., Rockingham, Vermont
Coordinates 43°11′17″N 72°29′20″W / 43.18806°N 72.48889°W / 43.18806; -72.48889Coordinates: 43°11′17″N 72°29′20″W / 43.18806°N 72.48889°W / 43.18806; -72.48889
Area 36.8 acres (14.9 ha)
Built 1908 (1908)
Architectural style Georgian, Federal
NRHP Reference # 07001346[1]
Added to NRHP January 4, 2008

The Rockingham Village Historic District encompasses the traditional village center of the town of Rockingham, Vermont. Settled in the 18th century, the district, located mainly on Meeting House Road off Vermont Route 103, includes a variety of 18th and 19th-century huses, and has been little altered since a fire in 1908. It notably includes the 18th-century National Historic Landmark Rockingham Meeting House. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.[1]

Description and history

The town of Rockingham was chartered in 1753, but settlement did not begin until the 1760s. Its village center was laid out on a terrace overlooking the Williams River to the north, which is where its first meeting house, cemetery, and post office were established. The village soon became a major stop on the road that followed the river (now Vermont Route 103), and featured shops, taverns, a grist mill, and blacksmith shops. The village was eclipsed by Bellows Falls in economic importance by the 1820s, and development was modest afterward. In 1908 a cluster of shops and homes was destroyed in a fire, with only a few buildings (notably including the Grange hall) replacing them. The village was bypassed in the 1950s by a new alignment of Route 103.[2]

The historic district extends along Meeting House Road, which is the former alignment of Route 103, from its southern junction with 103 to the dead-end spur on the west side of Divoli Brook. It includes a few buildings on Rockingham Hill Road, which extends south toward the village of Saxtons River. The district includes 13 properties of historic significance, including the town's first cemetery, the 1787 meeting house (a National Historic Landmark), and one of Vermont's best concentrations of late Georgian residential architecture. The oldest surviving houses date to the 1770s, and most of the building stock was built before 1850. The notable exceptions are the Grange hall and two houses, built near the road junction in the wake of the 1908 fire.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 "NRHP nomination for Rockingham Village Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-12-25.
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