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  1. Proctorsville, Vermont. Location in Windsor County and the state of Vermont. /  43.38222°N 72.63833°W  / 43.38222; -72.63833. Proctorsville is a census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Cavendish, Windsor County, Vermont, United States. As of the 2010 census, the population of the CDP was 454. [3]

  2. Cavendish is a town in Windsor County, Vermont, United States. The town was likely named after William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire. The population was 1,392 at the 2020 census. The town of Cavendish includes the unincorporated villages of Cavendish and Proctorsville.

  3. Proctorsville. Vermont. Proctorsville is a village located in the town of Cavendish, in Windsor County of the Southern Windsor County region. The village was named for Captian Leonard Proctor, a Revolutionary War veteran who moved his family to the area in the early 1780's from Massachusetts.

  4. 20. Aug. 2018 · About Proctorsville, Vermont. Village in the town of Cavendish, Windsor County. Coordinates (Geographic Center): N 72° 38′ W 43°22′. Census Info: County State. Named for the family whose name also was used for the town of Proctor.

  5. 16. Mai 2013 · Proctorsville Woolen Manufacturing Company: This mill was started by Jabez Proctor in 1836 and was reorganized in 1878, to become the second largest mill in Vermont. Reflecting changes in ownership, the Mill was known as the Murdock’s Mill, Crescent Woolen Mill, Proctor Mill and the Black Bear Woolen Mill. The Mill building was ...

  6. Nach Salmon Dutton, der sich im Jahr 1781 in Cavendish niederließ, wurde das Village Duttonsville benannt und nach Leonard Proctor, der im Jahr 1782 die Town erreichte, Proctorsville. [8] Im Jahr 1793 wurde Cavendish verkleinert und die südöstliche Ecke ca. 1214 Hektar (3000 Acre ) der Town wurde zur eigenständigen Town Baltimore.

  7. Salmon Dutton, who came in 1781, founded what is today known as the village of Cavendish, while Leonard Proctor arrived in 1782, developing what is now called the village of Proctorsville. The original size of Cavendish was seven miles square.