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By vermonthistory
5
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The podcast currently has 49 episodes available.
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/railroads-1989
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/school-consolidation-farewell-to-the-one-room-schoolhouse-1986
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/first-vermonters-the-abenakis-1976
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/act-250-1970
In the 1960s and early 1970s, Vermont acquired a reputation for being a haven for hippies and a hotbed of counter-cultural communal living. There was some truth to that. But the communes and alternative life-styles of that generation had a deeper history than most outsiders—and most of the commune residents themselves—knew. And, like their predecessors in the nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, the often colorful, sometimes controversial, and much-discussed communal experiments of the late twentieth century ended up having a profound impact on the next generation of Vermonters.
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/back-to-the-land-communes-in-vt-1968
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/vt-ny-youth-project-1968
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/aiken-formula-myth-and-reality-1966
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/dowsing-in-danville-1961
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/democrats-rising-1958
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/hi-tech-comes-to-vermont-1957
The podcast currently has 49 episodes available.
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