Vermont, Indiana

Vermont
Unincorporated community
Vermont
Coordinates: 40°29′57″N 86°01′55″W / 40.49917°N 86.03194°WCoordinates: 40°29′57″N 86°01′55″W / 40.49917°N 86.03194°W
Country United States
State Indiana
County Howard
Township Howard
Laid out January 1848
Elevation[1] 830 ft (250 m)
ZIP code 46901
FIPS code 18-78830[2]
GNIS feature ID 445252

Vermont is an unincorporated community in Howard Township, Howard County, Indiana, United States platted in January 1848. The founders also then already had a store set up in Vermont.[3] In the late 1800s it was a German campground.[4] Vermont was in the flooding zone when the Wildcat Creek Reservoir was constructed in 1957, and it never recovered from that. Vermont was once the home of the "Vermont Covered Bridge" which now sits in Highland Park in Kokomo, Indiana.[5] It is part of the Kokomo Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Geography

Vermont is located at 40°29′57″N 86°01′55″W / 40.49917°N 86.03194°W.

School

The area is served by Howard Elementary School, and North Western Schools.

History

Vermont was named in 1849 after the home state of the town's founder, Milton Hadley.[6]

The town at one time could be compared to the current Greentown. In 1957, the county built the Wildcat Creek Reservoir and Vermont was in the flood zone for that. Part of the town either moved north slightly or the northern tip is all that remains today. Therefore it could be considered a ghost town.[7]

Vermont Covered Bridge

The Vermont Covered Bridge that is now located in Highland Park and on the National Register Of Historic Places list in nearby Kokomo was once a bridge used in Vermont on the Wildcat Creek. The bridge was where the current concrete bridge is on 500 East between 50 North and 100 North, it was replaced with the current bridge when the county started planning the current reservoir. The City of Kokomo paid Vermont for the bridge and it was set to be moved to Kokomo. The arson, plus the age of the bridge made the bridge need some repairs for the park, and the park also opted for foot traffic only for safety reasons, and currently the bridge is only open to foot traffic in the fall. The sign on the front has the year 1875 printed on the front of it, the year it was built in Vermont by a contractor in Ohio.[8]

References

  1. "US Board on Geographic Names". United States Geological Survey. 2007-10-25. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  2. "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  3. "Early Settlements". KHPL Genealogy. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  4. http://www.historicmapworks.com/Map/US/22636/County+Map/Howard+County+1877/Indiana/
  5. "History of Highland Park". City of Kokomo. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  6. "A Look Back as We Move Forward". The Kokomo Tribune. March 28, 1999. p. 58. Retrieved August 16, 2014 via Newspapers.com.
  7. "History Of Highland Park". City of Kokomo.
  8. "History of Highland Park". City of Kokomo. Retrieved 22 December 2013.