Old Mill, the oldest building of the university
The Carnegie Building of the Fletcher Free Library in 2013
The Billings Memorial Library was built in 1883 and was the university's library until 1961 when the larger Guy W. Bailey library was built. Since then, it has served miscellaneous purposes.
The Old Constitution House at Windsor, where the Constitution of Vermont was adopted on July 8, 1777
Named for U.S. Senator Justin Smith Morrill, Morrill Hall was constructed in 1906–07 to serve as the home of the UVM Agriculture Department and the Agricultural Experiment Station.
A circa 1775 flag used by the Green Mountain Boys
Battery Park, which overlooks the Burlington Waterfront and Lake Champlain
UVM research vessel docked near ECHO Aquarium, in Burlington harbor along Lake Champlain.
The gold leaf dome of the neoclassical Vermont State House (Capitol) in Montpelier
ECHO, Leahy Center for Lake Champlain
Williams Hall (formerly Williams Science Hall) at the University of Vermont today houses the departments of Fine Arts and Anthropology.
1791 Act of Congress admitting Vermont into the Union
Burlington's Union Station was built in 1916 by the Central Vermont Railway and the Rutland Railroad. It now serves only tourist rail operations.
The George D. Aiken Center houses the Rubenstein School of Environment & Natural Resources
Vermont in 1827. The county boundaries have since changed.
One of the four buildings in the Edmunds School complex
The Gutterson Fieldhouse, built in 1963, houses UVM's hockey rink.
Map of Vermont showing cities, roads, and rivers
University of Vermont – Old Mill building
Davis Center, the student resource center of the university completed in the fall of 2007
Population density of Vermont
Ira Allen Chapel
Mount Mansfield
John Dewey
Western face of Camel's Hump Mountain (elevation 4079 ft).
Jody Williams
Fall foliage at Lake Willoughby
Madeleine Kunin
Köppen climate types of Vermont, using 1991–2020 climate normals.
Phil Scott
Silurian and Devonian stratigraphy of Vermont
Frederick H. Billings
The hermit thrush, the state bird of Vermont
William A. Wheeler
A proportional representation of Vermont exports, 2020
Grace Coolidge
Fall foliage seen from Hogback Mountain, Wilmington
Brian Halligan
Lake Champlain
Henry Jarvis Raymond
Autumn in Vermont
Peter Katis
Stowe Resort Village
Annie Proulx
The Lyndon Institute, a high school in Lyndon, Vermont
Ben Affleck
The University of Vermont
Old Mill, the oldest building of the university
Dierks Bentley
Vermont welcome sign in Addison on Route 17 just over the New York border over the Champlain Bridge
Duane Graveline
Amtrak station in White River Junction
Jessica Seinfeld
The Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant, in Vernon
The Vermont Supreme Court's building in Montpelier
Vermont towns hold a March town meeting for voters to approve the town's budget and decide other matters. Marlboro voters meet in this building.
Senators Bernie Sanders and Patrick Leahy and Representative Peter Welch greet supporters in 2017.
Vermontasaurus sculpture in Post Mills, in 2010

Burlington is the most populous city in Vermont and the seat of Chittenden County.

- Burlington, Vermont

The University of Vermont (UVM), officially the University of Vermont and State Agricultural College, is a public land-grant research university in Burlington, Vermont.

- University of Vermont

A regional college town, Burlington is home to the University of Vermont (UVM) and Champlain College, a small private college.

- Burlington, Vermont

The most-populous city, Burlington, is the least-populous city to be the most-populous city in a state.

- Vermont

The largest medical library in Vermont, the Charles A. Dana Library is the Vermont Resource Library of the National Network of Libraries of Medicine and serves the information needs of the Academic Health Center at the University of Vermont.

- University of Vermont

Vermont has five colleges within the Vermont State Colleges system, University of Vermont (UVM), and thirteen other private, degree-granting colleges, including Bennington College, Champlain College, Goddard College, Marlboro College, Middlebury College, Saint Michael's College, the Vermont Law School, and Norwich University.

- Vermont

2 related topics with Alpha

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New England

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Indigenous territories, circa 1600 in present-day southern New England
Soldier and explorer John Smith coined the name "New England" in 1616.
A 1638 engraving depicting the Mystic massacre
An English map of New England c. 1670 depicts the area around modern Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
The New England Ensign, one of several flags historically associated with New England. This flag was reportedly used by colonial merchant ships sailing out of New England ports, 1686 – c. 1737.
New England's Siege of Louisbourg (1745) by Peter Monamy
The Slater Mill Historic Site in Pawtucket, Rhode Island
Bread and Roses Strike. Massachusetts National Guard troops surround unarmed strikers in Lawrence, Massachusetts, 1912.
Autumn in New England, watercolor, Maurice Prendergast, c.1910–1913
Cambridge, Massachusetts, has a high concentration of startups and technology companies.
A political and geographical map of New England shows the coastal plains in the southeast, and hills, mountains and valleys in the west and the north.
A portion of the north-central Pioneer Valley in Sunderland, Massachusetts
Köppen climate types in New England
The White Mountains of New Hampshire are part of the Appalachian Mountains.
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Montpelier, Vermont, is the smallest state capital in the United States.
Largest self-reported ancestry groups in New England. Americans of Irish descent form a plurality in most of Massachusetts, while Americans of English descent form a plurality in much of the central parts of Vermont and New Hampshire as well as nearly all of Maine.
World's largest Irish flag in Boston. People who claim Irish descent constitute the largest ethnic group in New England.
Southeastern New England is home to a number of Lusophone ethnic enclaves.
The Port of Portland in Portland, Maine, is the largest tonnage seaport in New England.
The Hartford headquarters of Aetna is housed in a 1931 Colonial Revival building.
A plowed field in Bethel, Vermont
Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant in Seabrook, New Hampshire
A New England town meeting in Huntington, Vermont
Flag of the New England Governor's Conference (NEGC)
Alumni Hall at Saint Anselm College has served as a backdrop for media reports during the New Hampshire primary.
New England is home to four of the eight Ivy League universities. Pictured here is Harvard Yard of Harvard University.
Phillips Exeter Academy and Phillips Academy are two prestigious New England secondary schools founded in the late 18th century
Flag of New England flying in Massachusetts. New Englanders maintain a strong sense of regional and cultural identity.
A classic New England Congregational church in Peacham, Vermont
Boston's Symphony Hall is the home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra—the second-oldest of the Big Five American symphony orchestras.
New England regionalist poet Robert Frost
Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom is set on a fictional New England island and was largely filmed in Rhode Island
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
A Hartford Line Train at Hartford Union Station
The MBTA Commuter Rail serves eastern Massachusetts and parts of Rhode Island, radiating from downtown Boston, with planned service to New Hampshire. The CTrail system operates the Shore Line East and Hartford Line, covering coastal Connecticut, Hartford, and Springfield, Massachusetts.
1. Boston, Massachusetts
2. Worcester, Massachusetts
3. Providence, Rhode Island
4. Springfield, Massachusetts
5. Bridgeport, Connecticut
6. Stamford, Connecticut
7. New Haven, Connecticut
8. Hartford, Connecticut
9. Cambridge, Massachusetts
10. Manchester, New Hampshire
Harvard vs. Yale football game in 2003
Fenway Park
Bill Russell and Red Auerbach of the Boston Celtics
The New England Patriots are the most popular professional sports team in New England.
The Middlebury College rowing team in the 2007 Head of the Charles Regatta
Köppen climate types in New England

New England is a region comprising six states in the Northeastern United States: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.

As of December 2016, the metropolitan statistical area (MSA) with the lowest unemployment rate, 2.1%, was Burlington-South Burlington, Vermont; the MSA with the highest rate, 4.9%, was Waterbury, Connecticut.

The University of Vermont, the fifth oldest university in New England, was founded in 1791, the same year that Vermont joined the Union.

UVM Medical Center Main Campus

University of Vermont Medical Center

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Five-campus academic medical facility under the corporate umbrella of The University of Vermont Health Network corporate that is anchored by a 562-bed hospital.

Five-campus academic medical facility under the corporate umbrella of The University of Vermont Health Network corporate that is anchored by a 562-bed hospital.

UVM Medical Center Main Campus
UVM Medical Center Main Campus

UVM is located in Burlington, Vermont,

They were formerly known as both the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont as well as Fletcher Allen Health Care." and are affiliated with the University of Vermont College of Medicine and the University of Vermont College of Nursing and Health Sciences.

Founded in Burlington in 1879, Mary Fletcher Hospital was the first hospital in Vermont. It was renamed Medical Center Hospital of Vermont in 1967 when it merged with Bishop DeGoesbriand Hospital.