John L. Barstow (born February 21, 1832 in Shelburne, Vermont; died June 28, 1913 in Shelburne, Vermont) succeeded Roswell Farnham as the thirty-ninth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 5, 1882 and October 2, 1884. Following the end of Barstow's term as Governor, Samuel E. Pingree (born August 2, 1832 in Salisbury, New Hampshire; died June 1, 1922 in Hartford, Vermont) became the fortieth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 2, 1884 and October 7, 1886.
John L. Barstow (born February 21, 1832 in Shelburne, Vermont; died June 28, 1913 in Shelburne, Vermont) succeeded Roswell Farnham as the thirty-ninth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 5, 1882 and October 2, 1884, including the whole of 1883.
Samuel E. Pingree (born August 2, 1832 in Salisbury, New Hampshire; died June 1, 1922 in Hartford, Vermont) succeeded John L. Barstow as the fortieth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 2, 1884 and October 7, 1886, including the whole of 1885.
Roswell Farnham (born July 23, 1827 in Boston, Massachusetts; died January 5, 1903 in Bradford, Vermont) succeeded Redfield Proctor as the thirty-eighth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 7, 1880 and October 5, 1882. Following the end of Farnham's term as Governor, John L. Barstow (born February 21, 1832 in Shelburne, Vermont; died June 28, 1913 in Shelburne, Vermont) became the thirty-ninth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 5, 1882 and October 2, 1884.
Samuel E. Pingree (born August 2, 1832 in Salisbury, New Hampshire; died June 1, 1922 in Hartford, Vermont) succeeded John L. Barstow as the fortieth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 2, 1884 and October 7, 1886. Following the end of Pingree's term as Governor, Ebenezer J. Ormsbee (born June 8, 1834 in Shoreham, Vermont; died April 3, 1924 in Brandon, Vermont) became the forty-first Governor of Vermont, serving between October 7, 1886 and October 4, 1888.
Vermont does not have term limits.
Jonathan Hunt - Vermont Lieutenant Governor - was born in 1738.
Jonathan Hunt - Vermont Lieutenant Governor - died in 1808.
Central Vermont Railroad ended in 1899.
Jewett W. Adams (born August 6, 1835 in South Hero, Vermont; died June 18, 1920 in San Francisco, California) succeeded John H. Kinkead as the fourth Governor of Nevada, serving between January 1, 1883 and January 3, 1887, including the whole of 1884.
Phil Scott is the current Governor of Vermont. He was elected Governor in 2016 and assumed office on January 5, 2017. The Governor of Vermont is elected every two years and has no term limit.
The Governor of Vermont in July 2015 is Peter Shumlin. He was elected Governor on 2 Nov 2010, 6 Nov 2012 and 4 Nov 2014.
Thomas Chittenden.