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People
were climbing aboard a train in Bellows Falls on this day in 1893.
More than forty hours later, those passengers would arrive at the
Chicago World’s Fair.
Everyone
was excited to witness first-hand the marvels of electricity. Electric
fountains and incandescent lights were one of the fair’s main
attractions. United
States Vice President Levi P. Morton, a native of Shoreham, Vermont,
had dedicated the fair, and Vermont had a pavilion to promote the
state and its products.
Those
boarding the train would return to Bellows Falls ten days later
via the many miles of Central Vermont and Grand Trunk rail lines.
Image
courtesy Vermont At The World's Fair by
H. H. McIntyre.
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