List Of Counties In Vermont
In 1779, Vermont had two counties. The western side of the state was Bennington County and the eastern was Cumberland County. In 1781, three new counties (including then-called Washington that became part of New Hampshire) were created out of Cumberland County, and the remainder of the county was renamed Windham. Today's Washington County was created in 1810 as Jefferson County; it was renamed Washington in 1814.
Essex County, Orleans County, and Caledonia County are commonly referred to as the Northeast Kingdom.
The FIPS county code is the five-digit Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code which uniquely identifies counties and county equivalents in the United States. The three-digit number is unique to each individual county within a state, but to be unique within the entire United States, it must be prefixed by the state code. This means that, for example, while Addison County, Vermont is 001, Belknap County, New Hampshire and Alachua County, Florida are also 001. To uniquely identify Addison County, Vermont, one must use the state code of 50 plus the county code of 001; therefore, the unique nationwide identifier for Addison County, Vermont is 50001. The links in the column FIPS County Code are to the Census Bureau Info page for that county.
List
County |
FIPS code | Shire town | Est. | Origin | Etymology | Population | Area | Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Addison County | 001 | Middlebury | October 18, 1785 | Part of Rutland County. | Joseph Addison (1672–1719), an English politician and writer. | 37,720 | 770 sq mi (1,994 km) |
![]() |
Bennington County | 003 | Bennington, Manchester |
February 11, 1779 | One of the original two counties. | Benning Wentworth (1696–1770), the colonial governor of New Hampshire (1741–1766). | 37,183 | 676 sq mi (1,751 km) |
![]() |
Caledonia County | 005 | St. Johnsbury | November 5, 1792 | Part of Orange County. | Latin name for Scotland. | 30,610 | 651 sq mi (1,686 km) |
![]() |
Chittenden County | 007 | Burlington | October 22, 1787 | Part of Addison County. | Thomas Chittenden (1730–1797), first governor of Vermont (1791–1797). | 169,481 | 539 sq mi (1,396 km) |
![]() |
Essex County | 009 | Guildhall | November 5, 1792 | Part of Orange County. | Essex, a county in England. | 6,010 | 665 sq mi (1,722 km) |
![]() |
Franklin County | 011 | St. Albans (city) | November 5, 1792 | Part of Chittenden County. | Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790), one of the most revered Founding Fathers of the United States. | 50,994 | 637 sq mi (1,650 km) |
![]() |
Grand Isle County | 013 | North Hero | November 9, 1802 | Part of Chittenden County and Franklin County. | Largest island in Lake Champlain. | 7,467 | 83 sq mi (215 km) |
![]() |
Lamoille County | 015 | Hyde Park (town) | October 26, 1835 | Parts of Chittenden County, Franklin County, Orleans County and Washington County. | La Mouette (meaning the seagull), named by French explorer Samuel de Champlain (~1570–1635) but mistranscibed as La Mouelle and eventually corrupted to current spelling. | 26,060 | 461 sq mi (1,194 km) |
![]() |
Orange County | 017 | Chelsea | February 22, 1781 | Part of Cumberland County. | Prince William (1650–1702) of Orange. | 29,943 | 689 sq mi (1,785 km) |
![]() |
Orleans County | 019 | Newport (city) | November 5, 1792 | Part of Chittenden County and Orange County. | City of Orléans, France. | 27,516 | 697 sq mi (1,805 km) |
![]() |
Rutland County | 021 | Rutland (city) | February 22, 1781 | Part of Bennington County. | Town of Rutland, Massachusetts. | 60,271 | 932 sq mi (2,414 km) |
![]() |
Washington County | 023 | Montpelier | November 1, 1810 | Parts of Orange County, Caledonia County, and Chittenden County. Renamed from Jefferson County to Washington County on November 8, 1814 | George Washington (1732–1799), first President of the United States (1789–1797). | 60,142 | 690 sq mi (1,787 km) |
![]() |
Windham County | 025 | Newfane | February 22, 1779 (as Cumberland County) (renamed 1781) |
One of the original two counties. | Town of Windham, Connecticut. | 45,966 | 789 sq mi (2,044 km) |
![]() |
Windsor County | 027 | Woodstock | February 22, 1781 | Part of Cumberland County. | Town of Windsor, Connecticut. | 58,101 | 971 sq mi (2,515 km) |
![]() |
See also
- List of cities in Vermont
- List of gores in Vermont
- List of towns in Vermont
- List of former United States counties