West Hartford, Vermont circa 1965
Two Stores and Classic Sixties Cars
Jigsaw: Mid-60s West Hartford
This picture caught my eye for a few reasons: I've always liked West Hartford and I used to go to the store on the right, formerly a stopping point for many an Appalachian trail hiker. My dad had a '64 Mustang, seen here parked heading west on Route 14. That and our turquoise '57 Chevy wagon are two cars I wished I still had.
In this view, the West Hartford Bridge is to your right and straight ahead is Harper Savage Lane (formerly Depot Street), the heart of “downtown” West Hartford. I tried to take a current picture of the scene, but it was unfeasible, as both banks are completely grown in.
As often happens, one thing led to another, and I learned a lot about classic cars, historic floods, and important buildings, including the West Hartford depot.
1906 USGS Map:
So many buildings on the river side of Route 14 in 1906. There are none now.
Classic Cars:
1965–1966 Ford Mustang (foreground coupe by store)
1965 Pontiac full-size (split grille, stacked headlights)
1964–1965 Pontiac Tempest/LeMans or Oldsmobile F-85/Cutlass
(foreground mid-size at garage)
1963–1964 Chevrolet full-size (background, behind the mid-size)
1961–1962 Chevrolet full-size (left side of photo, Carpenter’s Store)
Sources:
Old Car Brochures
https://www.oldcarbrochures.org
Classic Car Database
https://www.classiccardatabase.com
Hemmings
https://www.hemmings.com
Flickr Car Spotting Groups
IMCDb (Internet Movie Cars Database) –
https://www.imcdb.org
Old Buildings:
Essential Guide to the West Hartford Historic District.
West Hartford on Wikipedia
Railroad Depot
White River Flood Photos:
After the 1927 flood. No sign of Route 14, cars, or the bridge, but the two stores survived.
Before the 1927 Flood, with the Carpenter Store, Harper Savage Lane (then Depot Street) and signpost to the right, and an inn on the left, just beyond the entrance to the West Hartford covered bridge, a bit west of the current bridge. Route 14 vanishes in the distance.
After Irene in 2011
Carpenter’s Store is gone.
But apparently the flood of 1867 was West Hartford’s worst:
from Historic Floods of New England (USGS, 1964)
From the Burlington Sentinel, March 1, 1867.
The details really bring the scene to life:
Don't you love the way "one thing leads to another" when you're writing a piece like this? All the threads & connections!
love the photos and learning the history of Hartford. I got to know more about Hartford
about 15 yrs ago as a "meals on wheels" driver and a former RE person.
Pat