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Center Road Culvert

1899 establishments in VermontBridges completed in 1899Bridges in Washington County, VermontBridges on the National Register of Historic Places in VermontBuildings and structures in East Montpelier, Vermont
NRHPweekly errorsNational Register of Historic Places in Washington County, VermontRoad bridges in Vermont
Center Road Culvert, East Montpelier, VT (4)
Center Road Culvert, East Montpelier, VT (4)

The Center Road Culvert is a historic stone culvert on Center Road at Mallory Brook in East Montpelier, Vermont. It was built in 1899 as an early project after the establishment of the Vermont Highway Commission in 1898, and is a well-preserved example of dry-laid stone box culvert. The last major work on the culvert was performed in 1930, after it suffered damage in Vermont's devastating 1927 floods. VTrans recommended the culvert undergo preservation rather than replacement following damage from Hurricane Irene, and Mallory Brook is to be rerouted through a larger modern structure. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2020.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Center Road Culvert (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Center Road Culvert
Center Road,

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Wikipedia: Center Road CulvertContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.286111111111 ° E -72.521666666667 °
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Address

Center Road 1910
05602
Vermont, United States
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Center Road Culvert, East Montpelier, VT (4)
Center Road Culvert, East Montpelier, VT (4)
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Nearby Places

Adamant, Vermont
Adamant, Vermont

Adamant is a small, unincorporated community in the town of Calais in Washington County, Vermont, United States, in the central part of Vermont. The village is situated on the town line between Calais to the north and East Montpelier to the south. There is no true boundary to define the village, and as such, there is great debate as to what constitutes residence. This is, however, purely theoretical as there is no legal, governmental, or commercial status associated with residence. The debate has given rise to the common aphorism that "Adamant is a state of mind".The village was originally known as Sodom from its inception prior to the mid-19th century as a granite quarry-town. Local lore tells the story of a preacher slamming his fist on the pulpit proclaiming, "I am adamant that we change the name of this town!" In 1905, residents petitioned the state legislature for a name change to "Adamant."The quarries remained an active part of the Vermont granite industry well into the mid-20th century. The small, rural village has no paved roads or traffic lights. The village center is the member-owned Adamant Co-op, a general store and post office located at the junction of Haggett, Quarry, Center and Sodom Pond Roads. Founded in 1935, it is the state's oldest co-operative.Perhaps the village's most notable inclusion is the Adamant Music School, a summer-long piano and musicology school founded in 1942. Adamant is also home to the Quarryworks Theater, a community theater set on the grounds of Adamant's largest quarry. Adamant was mentioned in the 2000 blockbuster movie What Lies Beneath starring Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer.