Distances in miles and kilometers from Hartford Village, Vermont to other cities in United StatesMeasures calculated from coordinates 43°39′49″N 72°20′11″W in a straight line: | |
[SW] Southwest / [SE] Southeast / [NW] Northwest / [NE] Northeast | |
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Google Earth and GPS Waypoint Coordinates (KML, WPT, GPX) Hartford VillageThe following files can be imported from Google Earth or used as Waypoints for GPS |
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Tourist information about Hartford VillageTourist and cultural information on nearby sites by coordinates: |
Hartford (village), Vermont Hartford is one of five unincorporated villages in the town of Hartford, Windsor County, Vermont, United States. It also referred to as Hartford Village. Hartford is the birthplace of Horace Wells, the first dentist to use nitrous oxide or "laughing gas" as anesthesia."", Encyclopædia Britannica (...) Hartford Library The Hartford Library is the public library serving the village of Hartford, Vermont. It is located at 1587 Maple Street, in an architecturally distinguished Queen Anne/Colonial Revival building constructed in 1893. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. (...) Terraces Historic District The Terraces Historic District encompasses a historic late 19th and early 20th-century residential area of White River Junction, Vermont. The district, developed as an upper middle-class residential area beginning in 1880, features a variety of architectural styles encapsulating the community's (...) White River Junction, Vermont White River Junction is an unincorporated village and census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Hartford in Windsor County, Vermont, United States. The population was 2,286 at the 2010 census, making it the largest community within the town of Hartford (...) Advent Camp Meeting Grounds Historic District The Advent Camp Meeting Ground Historic District encompasses the early surviving elements of a religious summer camp meeting ground in Hartford, Vermont. Founded in 1887, it is one of a small number of camp meetings surviving from the 19th century in the state, and the only surviving one run by (...) |