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Creamery Covered Bridge

1879 establishments in VermontBridges completed in 1879Buildings and structures in Brattleboro, VermontCovered bridges in Windham County, VermontCovered bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermont
Lattice truss bridges in the United StatesNational Register of Historic Places in Windham County, VermontRoad bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in VermontWooden bridges in Vermont
Creamery Covered Bridge West Brattleboro
Creamery Covered Bridge West Brattleboro

The Creamery Covered Bridge is a historic covered bridge in West Brattleboro, Vermont. Now closed to traffic, the Town lattice truss bridge formerly carried Guilford Road across Whetstone Brook, just south of Vermont Route 9. Built in 1879, it is Brattleboro's last surviving 19th-century covered bridge.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Creamery Covered Bridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Creamery Covered Bridge
Western Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Creamery Covered BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.849444444444 ° E -72.586666666667 °
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Address

Western Avenue 533
05301
Vermont, United States
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Creamery Covered Bridge West Brattleboro
Creamery Covered Bridge West Brattleboro
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WINQ (AM)
WINQ (AM)

WINQ (1490 AM; "WINK Country") is a radio station licensed to serve Brattleboro, Vermont. The station is owned by the Monadnock Broadcasting Group subsidiary of Saga Communications and licensed to Saga Communications of New England, LLC. WINQ simulcasts the country music programming of Keene, New Hampshire sister station WINQ-FM. The station had previously been assigned the WKVT call letters by the Federal Communications Commission. WKVT was part of a network of progressive talk stations throughout the northeastern United States that are owned by Saga Communications (others including WNYY in Ithaca, New York, WHMP in Northampton, Massachusetts, WHNP in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts and WHMQ in Greenfield, Massachusetts); these, in turn, were among the last progressive talk stations still on the air in early 2017. Because of the migration of most progressive talk shows to off-air platforms, Saga announced plans to begin dropping the format in February 2017; WNYY was the first to change, followed by WHNP, with most of the other stations in the network likely to follow.On May 30, 2018, WKVT dropped its syndicated programming, including Stephanie Miller and Thom Hartmann, and began to carry the country music programming of Keene-based WINQ; WKVT's local morning drive time program, Green Mountain Mornings, was retained following the format change. The station changed its call sign to WINQ on June 19, 2018. Green Mountain Mornings, which was hosted by Olga Peters, was cancelled in December 2018.