Timeline of Burlington, Vermont
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Burlington, Vermont, USA
Prior to 19th century
    
- 1763 - Town charter granted by the British Province of New Hampshire.[1]
 - 1774 - Settlement established.[1]
 - 1791
- March 4: Town becomes part of the State of Vermont.
 - November 3: University of Vermont founded.[2][3]
 - Burlington becomes shire town of Chittenden County.[4]
 
 - 1797 - Burlington Mercury newspaper begins publication.[5]
 
19th century
    
- 1801 - Vermont Sentinel newspaper begins publication.[5]
 - 1802 - Court house built.[4]
 - 1804 - Grasse Mount built, now a campus building of the University of Vermont
 - 1810 - Population: 1,690.[6]
 - 1813 - August 2: Town besieged by British forces.
 - 1815 - September: University of Vermont begins operating again.[2]
 - 1816 - Unitarian Church built.
 - 1823 - Methodist Episcopal Church established.[7]
 - 1825 - LaFayette visits town.[2]
 - 1826 - Champlain Transportation Company founded.[8]
 - 1827
- Free Press Weekly begins publication.[9]
 - Champlain Glass Company established.[4]
 
 - 1829
 - 1830 - Episcopal Society of Burlington founded.[8]
 - 1834 - Baptist church established.[11]
 - 1842 - Burlington Mechanics' Institute founded.[12]
 - 1845 - Winooski Mill Company established.[4]
 - 1847
 - 1848 - Central Vermont Railway began operating (until 1995).[1]
 - 1849
- Rutland & Burlington Railroad built.[13][14]
 - Central Vermont Railway begins operating.
 
 - 1852 - Burlington Lyceum founded.[12]
 - 1853 - Medical College established as part of the University of Vermont.[2]
 - 1854
 - 1856 - Van Sicklen & Walker grocers in business.[2]
 - 1857
- Custom House built.[4]
 - Burlington Breakwater Lights establshed.[3]
 
 - 1858
 - 1862 - University of Vermont library building constructed.[2]
 - 1865
- Burlington chartered as a city;[1] town of South Burlington established.[15]
 - Albert Catlin becomes mayor.[16]
 - Vermont Agricultural College incorporated with the University of Vermont.[2][3]
 - Home for Destitute Children founded.[2]
 
 - 1866 - St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum incorporated.[2]
 - 1867
- J.M. Henry & Sons in business.[2]
 - Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception built.[1]
 
 - 1869 - First Methodist Church of Burlington built.
 - 1870
 - 1872
 - 1873
- Fletcher Free Library established.[18]
 - County courthouse built.[2]
 
 - 1874 - Park House (hotel) in business.[2]
 - 1877 - Howard Opera House built (approximate date).[2]
 - 1878 - Burlington Commercial School established.[2]
 - 1879 - Mary Fletcher Hospital founded.[1]
 - 1880 - Population: 11,365.[1]
 - 1884 - Burlington Venetian Blind Company incorporated.[19]
 - 1885
- Old Ohavi Zedek Synagogue built.
 - Urban A. Woodbury becomes mayor.
 
 - 1886 - Daniel Webster Robinson House built.
 - 1887 - Cathedral of Saint Joseph completed.
 - 1888 - Burlington Cotton Mills incorporated.[20]
 - 1889
 - 1890 - Population: 14,590.[1]
 - 1894
- Queen City Cotton Co. incorporated.[20]
 - William J. Van Patten becomes mayor.
 - Burlington Daily News begins publication.[5]
 - Fort Ethan Allen established.[1]
 
 - 1897
- Burlington Masonic Temple built.[1]
 - Battery Park established.[21]
 
 - 1900 - Population: 18,640.[1]
 
20th century
    
- 1902 - Fletcher Free Library re-located.
 - 1904 - Strong Theatre opens.[22]
 - 1905
- Burlington Electric Department created.
 - McIntosh and Crandall engineering company in business.[8]
 
 - 1910 - Population: 20,468.[1]
 - 1916 - Union Station operated until 1953.
 - 1920 - First aircraft lands at Burlington International Airport.
 - 1922
 - 1925 - Trinity College founded.[8]
 - 1926 - Ira Allen Chapel dedicated.
 - 1930 - Flynn Theatre built.[25]
 - 1948 - U.S. Coast Guard Station Burlington established on Juniper Island.
 - 1953 - Ethan Allen Air Force Base activated.
 - 1964 - Burlington High School moves to current location; as part of a major realignment of the city's schools, Edmunds Elementary opens on the former campus replacing Adams (sold off and repurposed as office space) and Converse (demolished in urban renewal) schools.
 - 1967
 - 1969 - Howard Center headquartered in city.
 - 1972 - Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception destroyed by arson.
 - 1973 - Burlington International Airport new terminal opens.
 - 1977 - Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception re-built (closed 2018)
 - 1978 - Ben & Jerry's in business.
 - 1981
- Church Street Marketplace constructed.
 - Bernie Sanders becomes mayor.[27]
 
 - 1983 - City government Community and Economic Development Office established.[28]
 - 1989
- Outright Vermont founded.
 - Peter Clavelle becomes mayor.[16]
 
 - 1990
- Burlington City Arts established.[29]
 - Cara Wick designs the flag of Burlington as a school project.
 
 - 1993
 - 1998 - City website online.[30]
 - 2000 - "Legacy Plan" for development created.[28]
 
21st century
    
- 2003 - Howard Dean presidential campaign, 2004 headquartered in Burlington.[31]
 - 2006 - Bob Kiss becomes mayor.
 - 2009 - Vermont Daily News begins publication.
 - 2010 - Population: 42,417.
 - 2012 - Miro Weinberger becomes mayor.[32]
 - 2014 - with the purchase of the Winooski 1 hydroelectric project on the Winooski River electricity comes from 100 percent renewable sources[33]
 - 2015 - Bernie Sanders presidential campaign, 2016 headquartered in Burlington.
 - 2017 - Owen and Lucas Marchessault win a competition to redesign the former flag of Burlington. Their winning design is the current flag of the city.
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Britannica 1910.
 - Child 1882.
 - Britannica 1878.
 - Hemenway 1867.
 - Charles S. Forbes (August 1905). "History of Vermont Newspapers". The Vermonter. 11 (1).
 - Morse 1823.
 - C. A. Castle (1903), History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Burlington, Vermont, Burlington: Free Press Association, OL 2673435M
 - Special Collections, Bailey/Howe Library. "Finding Aids". Burlington: University of Vermont. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "US Newspaper Directory". Chronicling America. Washington DC: Library of Congress. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - Vermont; Thompson, Daniel Pierce (1835). "List of all local and private act passed from 1824 to 1835". Laws of Vermont. Montpelier, Vermont.
 - Henry Crocker (1913), History of the Baptists in Vermont, Bellows Falls, Vt.: P.H. Gobie Press, OL 13497208M
 - Davies Project. "American Libraries before 1876". Princeton University. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "Rutland Railroad Archives at Middlebury College". Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "Vermont Timeline". Barre, VT: Vermont Historical Society. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - Appleton 1870.
 - "Mayors of Burlington, 1865-present". City of Burlington. Archived from the original on August 27, 1999.
 - "Street Railway Supplement", Commercial and Financial Chronicle, NY, March 9, 1895
 - "Fletcher Free Library", Report of the Board of Library Commissioners of Vermont, 1896
 - Auld 1894.
 - Blue Book Textile Directory of the United States and Canada. 1901.
 - Charter 1897.
 - "Movie Theaters in Burlington, VT". CinemaTreasures.org. Los Angeles: Cinema Treasures LLC. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "History of Forestry in Vermont". State of Vermont, Department of Forests Parks & Recreation. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "About Us". Essex Junction, VT: Champlain Valley Exposition, Inc. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "Historic Theatre Inventory". Maryland, USA: League of Historic American Theatres. Archived from the original on July 21, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "Redistricting History". City of Burlington. Archived from the original on August 3, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - Rice 1985.
 - Woodard 2016.
 - "History of BCA". Archived from the original on May 7, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - "City of Burlington, VT Home Page". Archived from the original on December 1998 – via Internet Archive, Wayback Machine.
 - "Contact the Campaign". Dean for America. Archived from the original on January 29, 2004.
 - "Meet the Mayors". Washington, DC: United States Conference of Mayors. Archived from the original on June 27, 2008. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
 - AP: 100% of power for Vermont city now renewable
 - Federal Writers’ Project 1937, p. 371: "Chronology"
 
Bibliography
    
- Published in the 19th century
 
- Jedidiah Morse; Richard C. Morse (1823), "Burlington", A New Universal Gazetteer (4th ed.), New Haven: S. Converse
 - Zadock Thompson (1824), "Burlington", A Gazetteer of the State of Vermont, E. P. Walton, OCLC 5276863
 - John Hayward (1857), "Burlington, Vt.", New England Gazetteer (2nd ed.), Boston: Otis Clapp, OCLC 3441657
 - Walton, Joseph Soper (1866). "Burlington". Walton's Vermont Register. Claremont Manufacturing Company. hdl:2027/wu.89063116057.
 - Abby Maria Hemenway, ed. (1867), "Burlington", Vermont Historical Gazetteer, Burlington, Vt.: A.M. Hemenway
 - "Burlington, Vt.", Appleton's Handbook of American Travel: Northern and Eastern Tour, New York: D. Appleton, 1870
 - . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (9th ed.). 1878. p. 550.
{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - "Burlington". Walton's Vermont Register. Claremont, NH: Claremont Manufacturing Company. 1877. + 1879 ed.
 - "City of Burlington". Gazetteer and Business Directory of Chittenden County, Vermont. NY: Hamilton Child. 1882.
 - Burlington, Vt. as a Manufacturing, Business, and Commercial Center. Burlington Board of Trade. 1889.
 - "Industries and Wealth of Burlington". Industries and Wealth of the Principal Points in Vermont. NY: American Publishing and Engraving Co. 1891.
 - Joseph Auld (1894), Picturesque Burlington, Burlington, Vt: Free Press Association, OL 14034397M
 - ), Burlington (Vt (1897). Charter & Revised General Ordinances of the City of Burlington, Vt.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Charles S. Forbes (1900). "Twentieth Century Burlington". The Vermonter. 5.
 
- Published in the 20th century
 
- Katharine Lord (1904). Address book of Burlington, Vermont: 1904-5. Burlington.
 - Charles Edwin Allen (1905), About Burlington, Vermont, Burlington: Shanley
 - . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). 1910. pp. 837–838.
 - "Burlington". Walton's Vermont Register. 1910.
 - Federal Writers’ Project (1937). "Burlington". Vermont: a Guide to the Green Mountain State. American Guide Series. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Riverside Press.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) + Chronology - Tom W. Rice (1985). "Who Votes for a Socialist Mayor?: The Case of Burlington, Vermont". Polity. 17 (4): 795–806. doi:10.2307/3234575. JSTOR 3234575. S2CID 153889856.
 - George Thomas Kurian (1994), "Burlington, Vermont", World Encyclopedia of Cities, vol. 1: North America, Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO (fulltext via Open Library)
 
- Published in the 21st century
 
- James Fallows and Deborah Fallows (ed.), "City Makers: American Futures", The Atlantic (series of articles about Burlington, Vt.), 2014-
 - Colin Woodard (November 17, 2016), "America's First All-Renewable-Energy City", Politico
 
External links
    
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of Burlington, Vermont. | 
- Thomas Visser (ed.). "HP 206 Researching Historic Structures and Sites Projects". University of Vermont, Historic Preservation Program.
 - Items related to Burlingon, various dates (via Digital Public Library of America).
 - Images related to Burlington, Vermont, various dates (via New York Public Library)
 - Items related to Burlington, Vermont, various dates (via U.S. Library of Congress, Prints & Photos division)
 
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