View of Springfield on the Connecticut River by Alvan Fisher (Brooklyn Museum)
White River Junction in 1889
View of the City of Hartford, Connecticut by William Havell
The Old Constitution House at Windsor, where the Constitution of Vermont was adopted on July 8, 1777
Lillian Gish in Way Down East
View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm—The Oxbow (1836) by Thomas Cole
A circa 1775 flag used by the Green Mountain Boys
North Main Street c. 1908
The Memorial Bridge across the Connecticut River at Springfield, Massachusetts, the river's largest city
The gold leaf dome of the neoclassical Vermont State House (Capitol) in Montpelier
White River Junction in 1915
The Windsor Locks Canal Company at Enfield Falls, the Connecticut River's first major barrier to navigation
1791 Act of Congress admitting Vermont into the Union
The Oxbow, Connecticut River, circa 1910
Vermont in 1827. The county boundaries have since changed.
Downtown Hartford, Connecticut, during the 1936 flood
Map of Vermont showing cities, roads, and rivers
The Connecticut Lakes, the source of the Connecticut River, near the border of New Hampshire and Quebec
Population density of Vermont
Great Falls (Bellows Falls) at high flow under the Vilas Bridge, taken from the end of Bridge St on the Vermont side, looking upriver
Mount Mansfield
Satellite image of the Connecticut River depositing silt into Long Island Sound
Western face of Camel's Hump Mountain (elevation 4079 ft).
Drift boat fishing guide working the river near Colebrook, New Hampshire
Fall foliage at Lake Willoughby
Harbor seal in the Connecticut River, below the Holyoke Dam, following the shad run
Köppen climate types of Vermont, using 1991–2020 climate normals.
Riverbank restoration project in Fairlee, Vermont
Silurian and Devonian stratigraphy of Vermont
Near First Connecticut Lake
The hermit thrush, the state bird of Vermont
Near Colebrook, New Hampshire
A proportional representation of Vermont exports, 2020
Looking north from the French King Bridge at the Erving-Gill town line in western Massachusetts
Fall foliage seen from Hogback Mountain, Wilmington
Mist upstream of the Bissell Bridge between Windsor and South Windsor, CT
Lake Champlain
Founders Bridge in Hartford, with a view of the Bulkeley Bridge upstream
Autumn in Vermont
The river near its mouth
Stowe Resort Village
The Lyndon Institute, a high school in Lyndon, Vermont
The University of Vermont
Old Mill, the oldest building of the university
Vermont welcome sign in Addison on Route 17 just over the New York border over the Champlain Bridge
Amtrak station in White River Junction
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

White River Junction is an unincorporated village and census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Hartford in Windsor County, Vermont, United States.

- White River Junction, Vermont

Its original importance was due to its location at the confluence of the White River with the Connecticut River.

- White River Junction, Vermont

Thereafter, the nearby British Thirteen Colonies, especially the provinces of New Hampshire and New York, disputed the extent of the area called the New Hampshire Grants to the west of the Connecticut River, encompassing present-day Vermont.

- Vermont

The region stretching from Springfield north to the New Hampshire and Vermont state borders fostered many agricultural Pocomtuc and Nipmuc settlements, with its soil enhanced by sedimentary deposits.

- Connecticut River

The region along the river upstream and downstream from Lebanon, New Hampshire, and White River Junction, Vermont, is known as the "Upper Valley".

- Connecticut River

I-89.svg Interstate 89 runs a northwest–southeast path through Vermont, beginning in White River Junction and heading northwest to serve the cities of Montpelier, Burlington, and St. Albans en route to the Canada–U.S. border. I-89 intersects I-91 in White River Junction and has a short spur route, Interstate 189, just outside of Burlington.

- Vermont

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