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Lewis Grout House

Gothic Revival architecture in VermontHouses completed in 1880Houses in Brattleboro, VermontHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in VermontNational Register of Historic Places in Windham County, Vermont
Lewis Grout House Western Avenue and Bonnyvale Road Brattleboro
Lewis Grout House Western Avenue and Bonnyvale Road Brattleboro

The Lewis Grout House is a historic house on Western Avenue at Bonnyvale Road in West Brattleboro, Vermont. Built in about 1880 for a widely traveled minister, it is a well-preserved and somewhat late example of Gothic Revival architecture. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lewis Grout House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lewis Grout House
Bonnyvale Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.853611111111 ° E -72.601666666667 °
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Address

Bonnyvale Road 31
05301
Vermont, United States
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Lewis Grout House Western Avenue and Bonnyvale Road Brattleboro
Lewis Grout House Western Avenue and Bonnyvale Road Brattleboro
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Windham-3-1 Vermont Representative District, 2002–2012

The Windham-3-1 Representative District is a one-member state Representative district in the U.S. state of Vermont. It is one of the 108 one or two member districts into which the state was divided by the redistricting and reapportionment plan developed by the Vermont General Assembly following the 2000 U.S. Census. The plan applies to legislatures elected in 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, and 2010. A new plan will be developed in 2012 following the 2010 U.S. Census. The Windham-3-1 District includes a section of the Windham County town of Brattleboro defined as follows: That portion of the Town of Brattleboro to the west of a boundary beginning at Upper Dummerston Road at the Dummerston town line, then southeasterly along the centerline of Upper Dummerston Road to Interstate 91, then southerly along the median of Interstate 91 to Williams Street, then easterly along the centerline of Williams Street to where the Whetstone Brook crosses, then southwesterly along the western bank of the Whetstone Brook to Lamson Street and southerly along the centerline of Lamson Street to Chestnut Street, then westerly along the centerline of Chestnut Street to Interstate 91, then southerly along the median of Interstate 91 to the Guilford town line. The rest of the town of Brattleboro is in Windham-3-2 and Windham-3-3. As of the 2000 census, the state as a whole had a population of 608,827. As there are a total of 150 representatives, there were 4,059 residents per representative (or 8,118 residents per two representatives). The one member Windham-3-1 District had a population of 4,148 in that same census, 2.19% above the state average.

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.