Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Chimney Point, Vermont


This strategic point on Lake Champlain was occupied by Native Americans for thousands of years. In 1690 Jacobus deWarm build a small stone fort here. The French built a wooden stockade in 1731, erecting Fort St. Frederic across the lake in 1734. After the 1759 French retreat to Canada, the houses were burned, leaving only the chimneys; thus the name Chimney Point. The British built a military road in 1759 to connect Fort No. 4 at Charlestown, New Hampshire, to their new fort at Crown Point, New York; the road ended two miles to the south. They also built earthworks at Chimney Point as did American Revolutionary forces in 1776. The tavern, built in the 1780s, was visited in 1791 by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.


Chimney Point Tavern, built in the 1780s


The 80 year old bridge from Chimney Point to Crown Point, New York, was imploded on December 28, 2009. A new bridge is scheduled to open later in 2011.

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