Vermont Public Radio

Vermont's NPR

  • RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
  • Help Center
  • Contact

Support VPR Help pay for the programming you enjoy
Pledge Online

Eye On The Sky Weather



Current Conditions in Burlington International Airport

40° Skies A Few Clouds
Windchill 40 °
Wind

HD Radio Discount for VPR listeners

Learn more about this special offer

My Vermont

The My Vermont Project continues with a special week of programs on Vermont Edition dedicated to the future of Vermont. Click on the link below to learn more about each program and how to post your thoughts and questions.

Learn more about the My Vermont Project

VPR and NPR on your Phone

Get the latest updates from VPR and NPR news on your phone or Mobile device.

Learn about VPR Mobile

Vermont Edition

Vermont Edition brings you news and conversation about issues affecting your life - plus a bit of the unexpected.

Listen to Vermont Edition

Plant-A-Tree and the Global ReLeaf Campaign

Learn more about our partnership to plant-a-tree with American Forests.

Learn more

Join VPR at Fenway Park!

Unite your love for VPR and the Red Sox with a VPR trip to Fenway Park to see the Boston Red Sox play the Baltimore Orioles on Saturday, July 12th.

Learn more and get your tickets here

Celtic Music Tour of Ireland

Join VPR and All the Traditions host Robert Resnik for a musical tour of Ireland, September 4-15, 2008.

Join VPR in Ireland in September!

Commentary Series

Explore the archive of Commentaries by many of your favorite Vermonters.

VPR Commentary Series

Receive Our Newsletter

Commentary Series (VPR)

7:55am and 5:55pm Weekdays

«previous   next»

Monday January 6, 2003

Great thoughts: the Vermont Story


(Host) Great thoughts and philosophies from Vermonters have shaped our state and sometimes influenced the nation. Commentator Frank Bryan explores Earl Newton's history of the state.

(Bryan) In 1948, the Vermont Historical Society and its director Earl Newton gave Vermont a precious gift: the gift of memory. I discovered Earl Newton's history, The Vermont Story, in the Newbury Town Central School, along with the other 4-6 graders sitting in 25 little desks bolted to the floor.

On soft winter days, when our work was done, I and so many other kids like me all over Vermont sat at our desks turning the pages of that glorious volume. It is a complete history of serious scholarship, but it is written so well even fifth graders can understand most of it.

It's not a pictorial history, but there are pictures: pictures of Ethan Allen and the cannons of Ticonderoga. But there are also pictures of farms, churches, quarries, machine tools, authors and actors and playwrights - and the work of the sculptor's chisel, including Vermonter Hiram Power's famous nude, The Greek Slave, which (as I remember) was on page 215.

Newton's book was the first complete history of Vermont. It brilliantly bridged the gap between serious scholarship and popular consumption. Newton wanted us to know about ourselves.

With introductory essays by Dorothy Canfield Fisher and Allen Nevins, The Vermont Story is a beautiful book. Its colors are rich, its format varied and exciting, its prose compelling. Moreover, it is physically - as a book - so technically well crafted it's a metaphor for the message it imparts, a message that came at just the right time. For Vermont was on the threshold of a whole new life.

That message is this: The Vermont story is a story of how a people living in one of the physically most isolated and difficult environments in America fashioned a progressive and technically astute culture. From agriculture to the arts, Earl Newton reminded the generation of Vermonters that was about to preside over the greatest population influx to the state since the turn of the 18th century that life close to the earth, lived out in small communities of human scale, is not only beautiful, it is smart. What a perfect idea.

This is Frank Bryan from Starksboro.

Frank Bryan is a writer and teaches political science at the University of Vermont. Learn more about the Great Thoughts of Vermont series and share your comments with other listeners.



«previous   next»
  • web tools supported by:
  • Contributing Listeners
Home More Streams VPR Classical VPR