Vermont's Venerable Byway
The state's Route 100 offers an unparalleled access to old New England, from wandering moose to Robert Frost's hideaway cabin
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Jessica Scranton
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
The Robert Frost Cabin lies ten miles west of Route 100, near the midway point in the road’s 216-mile ramble through valleys, woods and farmlands between Massachusetts and Canada. Although I had driven to Vermont many times to ski, I had always taken the interstate, hellbent on reaching the slopes as quickly as possible. This time, however, I followed “The Road Not Taken,” to quote the title of one of Frost’s best-known poems, pausing at the Vermont cabin where he wrote many of them.
I crossed over covered bridges spanning sun-dappled rivers, past cornfields and grazing cows, into a landscape punctuated by churches with tall steeples and 18th-century brick houses behind white picket fences. A farmer rode a tractor across freshly mowed acreage; old-timers stared at me from a sagging porch at the edge of a dilapidated village. My trip included stops at a flourishing summer theater; an artisanal cheese maker in a state famous for its cheddars and chèvres; the 19th-century homestead of an American president; primeval hemlock stands and high passes strewn with massive, mossy boulders; and bogs where moose gather in the early evening. On either side of me rose Vermont’s Green Mountains, the misty peaks that set its citizens apart from “flatlanders,” as Vermonters call anyone—tourist or resident—who hails from across state lines.
Route 100 grew organically from roads connecting villages dating back to the 1700s, following the contours of the Vermont landscape. “It eventually became one continuous route, curving along rivers and through mountain valleys,” says Dorothy A. Lovering, producer and director of a documentary about the storied country road. “That’s why it offers such remarkable visual experiences.”
The Frost log-and-wood slat cabin stands in a clearing outside the town of Ripton (pop. 566), where the poet spent summers and wrote from 1939 until his death in 1963 at age 88. (Today, the farm, now a National Historic Landmark, belongs to Middlebury College, which maintains the property as a Frost memorial. The public has access to the grounds.) Behind a forest of 100-foot-tall Norwegian pines, the weathered cabin looks out on an apple orchard, a meadow carpeted in wildflowers and a farmhouse. The vista evokes an image from his poem “Out, Out—”:
Five mountain ranges one behind the other
Under the sunset far into Vermont.
A visit to the site is bittersweet. On the night of December 28, 2007, vandals shattered windows, smashed antiques and damaged books inside the property’s main farmhouse. The intruders caused more than $10,000 in damage. Fortunately, some of Frost’s most cherished belongings—including his Morris chair and a lapboard the poet used as a writing surface—had already been moved to the Middlebury campus. Although marred in the rampage, Frost’s pedal organ has been repaired and remains in the farmhouse. The cabin itself, where Frost etched a record of daily temperatures on the inside of the door, was not disturbed.
Twenty-eight young men and women—ages 16 to 22—were charged with trespassing or destruction of property, then turned over to poet Jay Parini, a Frost biographer and professor of literature at Middlebury, who taught the miscreants about Frost and his work. “I thought they responded well—sometimes, you could hear a pin drop in the room,” recalls Parini. “But you never know what’s going on in a kid’s head.”
I had begun my Route 100 odyssey by driving through that hallowed Vermont landmark—a covered bridge. Turning off Route 100 outside the town of Jamaica (pop. 946), I drove southeast for four miles to reach Scott Bridge—built in 1870 and named for Henry Scott, the farmer whose property anchored one end—in Townshend (pop. 1,149). Spanning the boulder-strewn West River, at 277 feet it is the longest of the state’s 100 or so covered bridges—down from 500 a century ago.
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Comments (6)
I have an original "this is NOT route 100" sign from the sixties
Posted by Bill Ludwig on December 4,2011 | 04:32 PM
I have nothing but beautiful memories of Vermont having lived there for ten years. First town we moved to was Jacksonville in southern Vermont then to a beautiful place off Route 100 named *SKY FARM* in Whitingham. Route 100 is said to be one of the most scenic routes of the United States if not the most.
Posted by LISETTE GOSSELIN CÔTÉ on August 10,2010 | 04:41 PM
There is nothing quite like the ride on Route 100 from the Massachusetts boarder to Canada. The trip can be done in 4 hours but I would like to take 4 weeks to savor it after I retire. So much look forward to a week in Stowe and a week in Waitsfield in June. As for a map, it just runs right up the middle of the state! Ann Murdock, Houston, TX
Posted by Ann Murdock on May 8,2010 | 07:47 PM
As I sit in my office on Route 100— in Waitsfield, at just about the halfway mark up the state— I am reminded of my own favorite byways along this 'backbone' of Vermont... the Mad River Path where you can run, walk, x-c ski, bike or snowshoe alongside its namesake river... the Great Eddy Covered Bridge, the oldest continuously operated covered bridge in the state with a wonderful swimming hole beneath... the field at Turner's Farm that becomes a riot of yellow dandelions each May... and in August this 26-mile stretch of Route 100 that curves through the Mad River Valley becomes a veritable marathon of art during the Vermont Festival of Arts. And on a day in April when we get 'blessed' with an unexpected foot of snow, I certainly appreciate our great road crews who make '100' passable every day. Thank you for this delightful foray into a place that I sometimes take for granted!
Posted by Beverly Kehoe on April 28,2010 | 04:09 PM
how could the smithsonian present a trip description without a map? where is the map of route 100?
Posted by PATRICIA MCGRADY on April 28,2010 | 10:27 AM
An inspired article - one of the best for capturing the soul of Vermont
Posted by Paul Bachorz on April 28,2010 | 07:19 AM