Sights
Trip Ideas
- Where to Go
- The Best of Vermont
- Rumblings of Revolution
- New, New England Dining
- Boston’s Artistic Expression
- Vermont Leaf Peeping
- Into the Wild
- Vermont Skiing at Its Best
- Visit Vermont’s Maple Sugar Shacks
- Connecticut for Kids
- Vermont’s Covered Bridges
- A Shore Thing
- Vermont with Kids
- Portland Maine Art Galleries
- Small-Town Flavor
- Connecticut’s Wine Trails
- New Hampshire’s Farmers Markets
- A Weekend of Vermont Art
- Family Matters
- Maine Wilderness Camps
- Vermont Cheddar Houses
- Connecticut Spas
St. Albans Historical Society Museum
Situated on the east side of the green, the three-story St. Albans Historical Society Museum (Church St., 802/527-7933, www.vmga.org/franklin/st.albanshs.html, 1–4 p.m. Mon.–Fri. mid-June–early Oct., $3 adults, free children 14 and under) is chock-full of historical artifacts, including relics from the Civil War raid, a 3-D re-creation of Norman Rockwell’s painting The Doctors Office, and railroad memorabilia. Its pièce de résistance is a new 18-foot-long LED-festooned diorama of the Lake Champlain region.
Chester A. Arthur Historical Site
North of St. Albans, the Chester A. Arthur Historical Site (off Rte. 36 or 108, Fairfield, 802/828-3051, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Sat.–Sun. July–mid-Oct., donations accepted) honors the nation’s 21st president, best known for reigning in the worst of the Gilded Age excess with rigorous prosecution of fraud and the establishment of the modern civil service.
The site displays a pictorial history of Chas’s life in a reconstruction of the home where Arthur was purportedly born (though modern research shows he actually moved to the house when he was one year old). To get to the site, head north from the small village of Fairfield and bear right after one mile. Continue for five miles along the road, which eventually turns to gravel.
Abenaki Nation
Nearby Swanton is also the tribal headquarters for the Abenaki Nation (100 Grand Ave., Swanton, 802/868-2559, www.abenakination.org), the western branch of the “People of the Dawn,” the Native Americans who inhabited most of northern Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine for thousands of years before the coming of European settlers. The Nation runs a museum with exhibits including headdresses, masks, and an authentic birch-bark canoe.
© Michael Blanding and Alexandra Hall from Moon New England, 2nd Edition
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Moon Travel Guides make independent travel and outdoor exploration fun and accessible. With expert and adventurous travel writers delivering a mix of honest insight, first-rate strategic travel advice, insider travel tips and an essential dose of humor, Moon Travel Guides ensure that travelers have an uncommon and entirely satisfying experience. Each travel book is filled with unique trip ideas, easy-to-use maps, and detailed information on sights, restaurants, and accommodations. Moon Travel Guides not only point you in the right direction, they inspire new ideas and adventure. Whether you are seeking a relaxing beach trip to Hawaii, or an adventure travel trip to the rainforests of Costa Rica, Moon guidebooks—and Moon.com—are with you every step of the way. Founded in 1973, the Moon Travel Guides series includes Moon Handbooks, Moon Outdoors, Moon Metro, Moon Living Abroad and Moon Spotlight travel books. Moon is based in Berkeley, California and is a proud member of the Perseus Books Group.