Samuel C. Crafts (born October 6, 1768 in Woodstock, Connecticut; died November 19, 1853 in Craftsbury, Vermont) succeeded Ezra Butler as the twelfth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 10, 1828 and October 18, 1831. Following the end of Crafts' term as Governor, William A. Palmer (born September 12, 1781 in Hebron, Connecticut; died December 3, 1860 in Danville, Vermont) became the thirteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 18, 1831 and November 2, 1835.
Samuel C. Crafts (born October 6, 1768 in Woodstock, Connecticut; died November 19, 1853 in Craftsbury, Vermont) succeeded Ezra Butler as the twelfth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 10, 1828 and October 18, 1831, including the whole of 1829.
William A. Palmer (born September 12, 1781 in Hebron, Connecticut; died December 3, 1860 in Danville, Vermont) succeeded Samuel C. Crafts as the thirteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 18, 1831 and November 2, 1835, including the whole of 1832.
William A. Palmer (born September 12, 1781 in Hebron, Connecticut; died December 3, 1860 in Danville, Vermont) succeeded Samuel C. Crafts as the thirteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 18, 1831 and November 2, 1835, including the whole of 1833.
William A. Palmer (born September 12, 1781 in Hebron, Connecticut; died December 3, 1860 in Danville, Vermont) succeeded Samuel C. Crafts as the thirteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 18, 1831 and November 2, 1835, including the whole of 1834.
Redfield Proctor (born June 1, 1831 in Proctorsville, Vermont; died March 4, 1908 in Washington DC) succeeded Horace Fairbanks as the thirty-seventh Governor of Vermont, serving between October 3, 1878 and October 7, 1880, including the whole of 1879.
William A. Palmer (born September 12, 1781 in Hebron, Connecticut; died December 3, 1860 in Danville, Vermont) succeeded Samuel C. Crafts as the thirteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 18, 1831 and November 2, 1835. Following the end of Palmer's term as Governor, Silas H. Jennison (born May 17, 1791 in Shoreham, Vermont; died September 30, 1849 in Shoreham, Vermont) became the fourteenth Governor of Vermont, serving between November 2, 1835 and October 15, 1841.
Ezra Butler (born September 24, 1763 in Lancaster, Massachusetts; died July 12, 1838 in Waterbury, Vermont) succeeded Cornelius P. Van Ness as the eleventh Governor of Vermont, serving between October 13, 1826 and October 10, 1828. Following the end of Butler's term as Governor, Samuel C. Crafts (born October 6, 1768 in Woodstock, Connecticut; died November 19, 1853 in Craftsbury, Vermont) became the twelfth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 10, 1828 and October 18, 1831.
Horace Fairbanks (born March 21, 1820 in Barnet, Vermont; died March 17, 1888 in New York) succeeded Asahel Peck as the thirty-sixth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 5, 1876 and October 3, 1878. Following the end of Fairbanks' term as Governor, Redfield Proctor (born June 1, 1831 in Proctorsville, Vermont; died March 4, 1908 in Washington DC) became the thirty-seventh Governor of Vermont, serving between October 3, 1878 and October 7, 1880.
Redfield Proctor (born June 1, 1831 in Proctorsville, Vermont; died March 4, 1908 in Washington DC) succeeded Horace Fairbanks as the thirty-seventh Governor of Vermont, serving between October 3, 1878 and October 7, 1880. Following the end of Proctor's term as Governor, Roswell Farnham (born July 23, 1827 in Boston, Massachusetts; died January 5, 1903 in Bradford, Vermont) became the thirty-eighth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 7, 1880 and October 5, 1882.
Vermont College of Fine Arts was created in 1831.
Vermont does not have term limits.
Jonathan Hunt - Vermont Lieutenant Governor - was born in 1738.