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Mount Independence State Historic Site

472 Mt Independence Rd, Orwell, VT 05760

Vermont

state

VT - Addison

county

VT - Burlington

city

PARK

TICKETED:

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PARKING:

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RESTROOMS:

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TICKET INFO

Mount Independence State Historic Site is a Vermont State Historic Site with a museum and 6 miles of hiking trails. The museum houses artifacts recovered by archaeologists including timbers from the Great Bridge and a cannon cast in Scotland in 1690 and recovered from the lake by underwater archeologists. The 1.6 miles Baldwin Trail is wheelchair-accessible and passes the sites of the blockhouses, the General Hospital, and soldiers' huts. Longer trails lead to the location of the star-shaped fort, the Horseshoe Battery, and the Great Battery. The Mount Independence Visitor Center is open daily from the end of May through mid-October.

SITE FEATURES

On this site...

Mount Independence was important to Native Americans as a source of high quality blue/black chert used for making tools and projectile points. Mount Independence chert was traded across the Northeast. East Creek and the wetlands of the East Creek valley were a rich source of fish, waterfowl, freshwater mussels, beaver, deer, and other animals.

OVERLOOK

EST. JUL 1776

FORTIFICATION

BATTLEFIELD

Fortification was begun in June of 1776, and the name Mount Independence was bestowed following the Declaration of Independence. Lieut. Col. Jeduthan Baldwin was the chief construction engineer. Here the exhausted American Army, Northern Department, was stationed after withdrawing from its disastrous Canadian Campaign. Built on a rocky plateau and stoutly fortified, the post was a natural stronghold facing any approaching foe from the north. Within its rugged confines thousands of New Englanders, many succumbing to illness and lack of supplies, were quartered.


Because of its commanding position and formidable battle works, which made it more powerful at the moment than impaired Ticonderoga, it checked for a year a British thrust southward, until at the fall of its companion fortress across the channel it was evacuated in the early morning darkness of July 6, 1777. This critical year of reprieve gave the American forces time to organize farther south, meet and destroy General Burgoyne at Saratoga, win French support, and eventually subdue General Cornwallis at Yorktown, fulfilling the prophecy of the mountain’s name.

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HISTORIC PEOPLE

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