Manchester and Bennington are both the county seat for Bennington County
Dorset is in Bennington County
Bennington County(65) ► ADJACENT TO BENNINGTON COUNTY Rutland County(127) ► Windham County(75) ► Windsor County(109) ► Berkshire County, Massachusetts(159) ► Franklin County, Massachusetts(95) ► Rensselaer County, New York(164) ► Washington County, New York(170) ►
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On Dorset West Road at Nichols Hill Road, on the right when traveling south on Dorset West Road.
Vermont Society of Colonial Dames
Historic Marker
Site of
Cephas Kent's dwelling
adjacent the
Cephas Kent Inn
where
the First Convention of the New Hampshire
Grants was held in 1776
The Dorset Conventions
July 24, 1775
Seth . . . — — Map (db m159535) HM
On Dorset Hollow Road at Kirby Hollow Road, on the right when traveling south on Dorset Hollow Road.
Jonathon Fenton established a pottery and kiln near this site in 1801. He first made redware from clay found along the banks of the Mettowee River. He then became the first potter in Vermont to make salt-glazed stoneware. In 1810 he moved his . . . — — Map (db m78224) HM
On Vermont Route 30 at Kelly Road, on the right when traveling north on State Route 30.
Here, near Mt. Aeolus, Isaac Underhill opened the first marble quarry in 1785. Dorset quarries were most active in early 1800's when small slabs were used for hearths, doorsills and headstones. With better transportation and saws, larger blocks . . . — — Map (db m78226) HM
On Vermont Route 30, on the right when traveling south.
Marker Front: On September 12, 1886 a group of golfers, principally from Troy and New York City, who summered in Dorset, laid out a nine hole golf course, then known as The Dorset Golf Links on this present site. The Club's first president . . . — — Map (db m77585) HM
On Mad Tom Road at Village Street, on the right when traveling north on Mad Tom Road.
Bill Wilson was born November 26, 1895, in a room behind the bar at the Wilson House Hotel. From age 11 until entering the Army, he lived at the Griffith House across the church yard from his birthplace. Bill W. wrote the book "Alcoholics Anonymous" . . . — — Map (db m94430) HM