Brief History of Westminster, Vermont
Westminster is one of Vermont’s
oldest and most historic towns, beginning as Township No. 1, or New Taunton,
under the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1734. There was no permanent settlement until 1751,
when a survey placed “No. 1” in the New Hampshire Grants with the name of Westminster. In 1762, when the King decreed that the
Connecticut River would be the border between New
Hampshire and New York, Westminster became a part of Cumberland County, New York.
The main street in Westminster Village on route 5 was laid out during
the reign of George the Second, and called the King’s Highway. Originally, the right-of-way was ten rods wide, having been
designed for use as a training ground for the military company. Today, the house fronts along the King's Highway are still 165 feet apart.
The County Court House was
located in Westminster
from 1772 to 1778 and was the scene of many historic meetings and conventions.
Perhaps the most unusual was in January 1777, when citizens declared Vermont as a free and independent republic, which lasted
until it joined the United
States in 1791 and the 14th
state.
This same courthouse that
was the scene of the Westminster Massacre two years previously, an event
considered by many as the first bloodshed in the Revolutionary War, one month before the Battle of Lexington. Tory judges ran the court, but this Loyalist domination proved to be too much for area Colonists, or Patriots. King George’s courts of justice were almost closed in the colonies except in New York, where they continued to refuse to adopt the resolves of the Continental Congress. When they still insisted on holding court, people here rebelled. It was time for a March court session to consider action to collect debts, when a history-making event occurred.
Several men tried, without success, to talk the judge out of opening court. Realizing that they’d have to be inside the building first to be heard, as they wouldn’t be allowed admittance when officials arrived, a group of about 100 citizens entered the courthouse during the afternoon preceding court day, with a plan to remain until the judge heard their complaints. They went into the building armed only with clubs from a neighbor’s woodpile, having been assured by the judge that here would be no bloodshed. While the Patriots were in possession of the building,As a result of this
Westminster Massacre, Patriots quickly assembled in Westminster
the next day, coming from west of the Green Mountains, the southern part of the
county, and from Massachusetts. About 500 men equipped for war were assembled
here. The judge and other court
officials were taken to prison in Northampton,
MA, on a decision made by a
committee formed by the crowd. Court was
never again held in this county under the rule of Great Britain’s King George. The old court building stood, unoccupied,
from 1788, when Newfane became the county seat, until 1806 when it was sold and
torn down.
The Town of Westminster has been first in many events,
including:
* First Township granted in Vermont, named Township No.1 in 1736. In 1752, the Province
of New Hampshire incorporated it as Westminster.
* First State Bank
established in 1807.
* First Printing
Office established in Vermont
by Spooner & Green in 1778.
* First newspaper
in Vermont, “The Vermont Gazette” or “Green
Mt. Postboy” was printed on the old Day Press, the first used in North America
north of Mexico. This press is preserved in the Vermont Historical
Museum in Montpelier.