Talk:Burke, Vermont

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I propose that the following information, an article prepared about Burke, be incorporated into the current article or that the current article be replaced by it. The choice must be made with a vote participated by 500 registered wikipedians 50 of whom must be administrators, and 100 of whom must have registered at least one year ago, to include administrators, and can last no longer than 5 weeks. At the end of 5 weeks if there are less than 500 ( wikipedians have participated in the vote than the matter shall be determined by the results gathered from the 5 week pole. In the event of a tie the viting must be opened for another 3 week period that does not allow additional campaigning and so on unitl a winner is decided. After the decision has been made, the losing article shall have the ability to run for re-election once every 7 weeks. If the losing article loses more the 17 elections in a row than the article shall be banned from re-election. The only exception to the ban is by a nominating petition signed by 100 registered wikipedians (10 of whom must be administrators, 50 of whom must be wiki-vets by at least one year (to include administrators). After the banned article has been successfuly been renominated, a special election executive committe shall be estblished consisting of 11 members, 4 of which must be administrators from the nominating committee, and 4 who must be neutral administrators who have made no previous edits to the article. The remaining three seats must include the two registered wikipedians whom have been registered atleast 1 year and 1 month. The last member of the committee will be the person who had made the last edit beore the successful petition for a special election. The special election shall require the votes of at least 75% of persons participating in the petition to include all 10 administrators and atleast 8 of the 20 year or longer registered wikipedians. The entire electoral executive committe must vote except for the last person to edit the article before the successful petition for special election. The last editior shall only vote in the event of a tie.

Burke, Vermont - Town History

A Few Characteristics

East Haven, Victory, Kirby, Lyndon, Sutton, and Newark border Burke that is in Caledonia County. The town is located at 71E55' W, 44E35' N and approximately 900 feet altitude. The Town contains 34 square miles and 20,200 acres. The population is 1,423 and the Town has 759 year round housing units and 193 seasonal units (U.S. Census of Population & Housing Estimates 1995). Burke's most striking feature is Burke Mountain, called a Amonadnock mountain due to its solitary existence from other tall mountains and its resistance to erosion around it. This mountain is located in the southeastern part of Burke and is shared by the town of Victory, Vermont. The mountain towers approximately 3,000 feet above sea level and is presently the site of Burke Mountain Ski Area and Burke Mountain Recreation Touring Center. The town is characterized by three main ridges, which run north to south. Burke also enjoys the benefits of the East and West branches of the Passumpsic River and several of its tributaries flowing through the town.

Burke is located in the northern portion of Caledonia County with Route 5 looping through the southwestern corner of the town. West Burke is located where Route 5a breaks off northwest from Route 5. West Burke Municipal Forest lies adjacent to the village of West Burke. Route 114 runs approximately north-south through the eastern third of the town and the Portland Pipe Line runs though the northern part of the town, demarking about a quarter of the town to the north with its southeasterly to northwesterly course.

Burke Town contains the following neighborhoods: Burke Hollow, Burke Mountain, which is 3,267 feet high on the eastern edge of town, Burke Mountain Ski Area and Burke Mt. Recreation Touring Center, Darling State Park, Darion Inn Ski Touring Center, East Burke (which includes the Old School Museum and hosts the annual Sheep and Wool Festival), Burke Green, and West Burke.


Civic Structure

Burke was chartered in 1782 and was first settled one decade later. Over the years there have been several settlement centers, some of which have not survived. Burke Green, atop one of the ridges, was the first location to be designated as a center of town activity. A Town House, a burial ground and a green were built there in 1802. Shortly after, a potash producing business was started. However, Burke Hollow (located at a lower elevation in the central part of the town) replaced this location because of the burdensome climb to the top of the ridge. Still marking the original settlement center are gravesites and cellar holes.

The first sawmill and gristmill in town were erected, establishing the Hollow as the new town center. Consequently, several dwellings, a starch factory, a tavern, and the potash business were relocated to this spot. A carding mill, a tannery, other taverns and businesses began to appear in the mid-1800's. Ironically, Burke Hollow became known as a "sleepy village", even though a blacksmith shop, a creamery, several sawmills, a poultry business, a Union church, a harness shop, a townhouse, and at least twenty five dwellings were included in the town center, (Burbank, 1989). In this neighborhood one can still find the Old House, which is said to be the first tavern in Burke. A second historic structure dating from 1825 is the Old Union Meeting House, which seats 300 people.

During the first half of the 19th century, trade from the Lyndon area was quickly establishing the southern part of Burke Town. In South Burke there had been a stagecoach stop, a tavern, and even a post office. In 1857 the railroad was built through another settlement in West Burke, shifting the focus of development from South Burke to West Burke. With the coming of the railroad through West Burke, the lumber industry exploded and the years of greatest growth resulted (from 1870-1872). An article in the Vermont Union Journal of 1879 describes the village of West Burke as having approximately 70 dwellings, six stores, two blacksmiths, one tin shop, two gristmills, one furniture establishment, one carriage repair shop, two churches, one schoolhouse, one broom factory, one hotel, four doctors, and one lawyer. Even with the exhaustion of lumber from the land, the village remained a Aconvenient manufacturing center", (Burbank, 1989).

Between Burke Hollow and South Burke grew another bustling area known as East Burke. Land had been cleared in this area since 1802; however, it was not until the 1820's that people remained there permanently. By 1827 there was a sawmill and gristmill, a store, and a tavern. By 1830, water-powered looms were providing energy for a woolen factory. Later, the factory was used to make umbrella sticks, then became a repair shop, and finally became a finishing mill. In the wake of this economic boom, other businesses such as a starch factory and a brick-making factory opened, creating an altogether very prosperous time period between 1852 and 1860. By 1896 there were two country stores, two blacksmiths, a gristmill, two repair shops, two undertakers, a milliner, a barber, singing schools, two churches, and about 175 inhabitants, (Burbank, 1989). The White School House, named so for early settlers in Burke, was built two miles north of East Burke, but, in 1895, it was moved to its present site where it is merged with the Burke Mountain Club in East Burke. It houses local antiquities.

Before the turn of the 19th century there also existed a place called Burke Tongue, a triangular area encompassing 3,400 acres, (Burbank). On October 28, 1807 it was annexed to Hopkinsville and the two (Burke Tongue and Hopkinsville) were incorporated into the town of Kirby. The remaining land, four-sided and approximately six miles square, constitutes Burke today.

The 1930's were a time to take pride in the past. A Civilian Conservation Corps group was formed and helped rebuild a fallen lookout tower at the top of Burke Mountain in 1934. It was also a time foreshadowing the future of Burke=s ski industry. Land in Burke was donated to the state by the Darling family. On this land a park was built, including a paved road to the top of Burke Mountain, two miles of ski trails, a picnic area, running water, sanitation facilities, and a shelter, (Burbank, 1989). During this same period, from about the end of World War One until the 1960's, agriculture was the main economic industry. Previous to World War I, the economy depended upon the lumber industry in Burke.

After World War II, with the increased use of cars and television, activity declined in Burke. People brought their business to larger centers such as Lyndonville. Many of the old stores, theatres, etc. were either torn down or remodeled into apartments. Students attending Lyndon State College created a demand for apartments and off-site landlords became more prevalent. In 1953, thirteen men bought the park on Burke Mountain and formed Ski Burke Mountain Inc. In 1954, a Tucker Sno Cat carried people to the top so they could ski down. In 1955, a Poma Lift was installed. By 1965, when the group sold it to Burke Mountain Recreation Inc., the lands consisted of about 80 acres. Burke Mountain Recreation Inc. resold the land to Burke Mountain Enterprises in 1987. A European investor bought the Burke Mountain resort out of bankruptcy in 1996 and renamed it Northern Star-Burke Mountain. A majority of the jobs in Burke are related to the ski recreation business and many of the houses are used as vacation homes or are rented to college students, (Burbank, 1989). On another note, the number of farms in Burke decreased from 30 in 1960 to five in 1989, (Burbank, 1989).

What's in a name

Burke was originally spelled "Burk" in the charter, but officials added the "e" early on in town records. The name probably came from Edmund Burke (1729-1797), the British statesman and orator who strongly favored liberal treatment for the American colonies.

Historical Highlights

1845: Charles Albert Woodruff is born in Burke. He later becomes a brigadier general in the Philippines. 1871: Elva S. Smith is born in Burke. She later teaches at Carnegie Library School in Pittsburgh and writes children's books. 1933: L.A. and Henry Darling donate part of Burke Mountain to the Civilian Conservation Corps, which builds a park near the summit. 1970: Burke Mountain Academy opens. It allows high school students to study while training for competitive skiing. Personalities

The Darling Family The Darling family, who first cleared land in 1840 at the base of Burke Mountain, was a force of growth in many aspects of the town. Their fortune had been derived from the old Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York. Henry G. Darling, son of Ebenezer Darling, one Burke's early settlers, bought land at the base of Burke Mountain because he was concerned that most forested land would soon be ravaged for timber. His son, Elmer, built the neo-Georgian style Burklyn Hall in 1908 on this site. The hall, called Burklyn because half of it lay in Burke and the other half in Lyndon, was the location of many Christmas parties, held for the town's children. In this spirit of community service, Elmer Darling also funded, designed, and ran a community center called the Burke Mountain Club House that included a library and an area for movies to be shown. In addition, he was also responsible for making electricity available to the village and its homes around 1920. Both Burklyn Hall and the Darling land were donated to the state in 1957, (Fisher, 1987). In 1973, Burklyn Hall was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, (Burklyn, 1974). The Friends of Burklyn, a non-profit group, incorporated exclusively for furthering education at the estate, aims to maintain the building and grounds for creative education in the arts and natural sciences for all citizens of the Northeast Kingdom while preserving the property's beauty and dignity.

Couldn't this be worked into the current structure? Also, it would be desirable to have an article on each of the villages which may not now exist. My thought would be to say that the town contains the following villages: West Burke, etc. They would be linked with their own article.
I would like to see footnotes here. This information came from somewhere. It is important to know that the information was not copied verbatim from someplace thereby violating a copyright or implicit copyright.
As far as pictures go, if you live there, you can photograph someplace yourself and release your implicit copyright to Wikipedia.
Looks like a good start. Forget voting. Why not start folding it now into the current article with the structure that is already there? May have to add "History." Footnotes are key, as mentioned earlier.Student7 22:19, 1 May 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Voting

Student7 votes yea for integration

With footnotes. Still no mention of where this material came from. Please sign your edits. Student7 01:32, 2 May 2007 (UTC)
could someone please explain what is going on here? I think this information is useful but only if it's not a copyright violation and had sourced cited. Jessamyn (talk) 04:26, 2 May 2007 (UTC)
Just realized that "Burbank" was indicated in various places. That would need to be expanded into a real Wikipedia footnote with caret-ref-carets. See footnotes at the bottom of the page in St. Johnsbury, Vermont for an example. These footnotes are generated automatically when your puts refs by material. (look at the "edit" version of St. J. for an example.
This can go in immediately, but blending in with the current Burke format (sections), not this format (may need new History section). Jessamyn, I think, and I definitely are both concerned that this material not be copied or plagarized from Burbank or any other source. It needs to be re-written.Student7 12:03, 2 May 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Economic data

Wikipedia:WikiProject Cities/Guideline#Economy calls for the integration of income in economic data. Student7 (talk) 12:49, 11 December 2007 (UTC)