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
(Page 3 of 5)
Ten miles or so northeast of Healdville lies Plymouth Notch, the Vermont village of white houses and weathered barns where President Calvin Coolidge spent his childhood. Preserved since 1948 as a state historic site, it remains one of Route 100’s most notable destinations, attracting 25,000 visitors annually.
The village, with its handful of inhabitants, has changed little since our 30th president was born here on July 4, 1872. His parents’ cottage, attached to the post office and a general store owned by his father, John, is still shaded by towering maples, just as Coolidge described it in a 1929 memoir.
“It was all a fine atmosphere in which to raise a boy,” Coolidge wrote. The autumn was spent laying in a supply of wood for the harsh winter. As April softened into spring, the maple-sugar labors began with the tapping of trees. “After that the fences had to be repaired where they had been broken down by the snow, the cattle turned out to pasture, and the spring planting done,” recalled Coolidge. “I early learned to drive oxen and used to plow with them alone when I was twelve years old.”
It was John Coolidge who woke his son—then the nation’s vice president on vacation at home—late on the night of August 2, 1923, to tell him that President Warren G. Harding had suffered a fatal heart attack. John, a notary public, swore in his son as the new president. “In republics where the succession comes by election I do not know of any other case in history where a father has administered to his son the qualifying oath of office,” the younger Coolidge would write later.
Some 40 miles north of Plymouth Notch, Route 100 plunges down into its darkest, coldest stretch—the heavily wooded Granville Gulf Reservation. “Gulf” in this case refers to a geological process from more than 10,000 years ago, when mountaintop glaciers melted. The release of vast quantities of water gouged notches—or gulfs—into the mountains, creating a narrow chasm walled in by cliffs and forest. In 1927, Redfield Proctor Jr., who was governor from 1923 to 1925, donated most of the 1,171 acres of this six-mile ribbon of woodlands to the state, with prohibitions against hunting, fishing and commercial tree-cutting; the tract was to be “preserved forever.”
The section of Route 100 that crosses Granville Gulf was not paved until 1965. Even today, few venture farther than a turnout overlooking Moss Glen Falls, spilling 30 feet over a 25-foot-wide rock face. “It’s gorgeous—a real photo-op,” says Lisa Thornton, a forester at the reserve. She’s right.
Using a map originally drawn by a biologist more than 40 years ago, Thornton leads me toward a wedge of forest on the cliffs. We clamber up a hillside over spongy soil until we reach a stone ledge covered in moss and fern—and a stately stand of 80-foot-tall hemlocks, perhaps 500 years old. The trees survived, Thornton says, because they were virtually inaccessible to Native Americans, European pioneers and timber companies. I’m reminded of Frost’s poem “Into My Own”:
One of my wishes is that those dark trees,
So old and firm they scarcely show the breeze,
Were not, as ‘twere, the merest mask of gloom,
But stretched away unto the edge of doom.
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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