Saxtons River

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File:Saxtons River Falls 5-28-2014 10-01-25 AM.JPG
Falls in Saxtons River Village, seen from below the Westminster St bridge, at fairly high flow. Part of Tenney's Mill is visible behind the bridge (red building); it was powered by water from a dam farther upstream. The foundations of Frey's Mill, which was powered by water from these falls, are just out of the frame on the right.

The Saxtons River is a 22.9-mile-long (36.9 km)[1] river in the U.S. state of Vermont, a tributary of the Connecticut River. Its watershed covers 78 square miles (200 km2) and a range in altitude of 1,800 feet (550 m); land use is about 80% forested and 3% agricultural, and the upper river supports wild brook trout and brown trout, while Atlantic salmon occur but are usually limited to the area below Twin Falls on the lower river.[2][3]

Etymology

File:Saxtons River in Vermont.jpg
Looking east down Saxtons River, just west of the village of Saxtons River.

The river is often reported to be named after a surveyor named Saxton who drowned (or almost drowned) in the river during the first survey of town lines along the river in 1736, but this does not appear to be the source of the name. "Saxton's" was apparently a variant spelling of "Sexton's," which was the spelling used in the first written record of the river, by a scouting party from Fort Dummer in 1724.[4] We do not know the source for the "Sexton's" name, however. Sexton appears to be more common as a surname than Saxton, since a sexton is a church or synagogue officer.

Geography

File:Waterfall at gages Mill 5-6-2014 10-47-09 AM.JPG
Falls on the Saxtons River with ruin of Gages Mill on the right, North Westminster, VT.

The Saxtons River rises to the east of Glebe Mountain, in the town of Windham. It continues on through the towns of Grafton and Rockingham, passing through the Rockingham village of Saxtons River (named for the river). It then continues into the town of Westminster before joining the Connecticut River at Westminster, just south of the Rockingham town line. Its watershed lies south of the Williams River watershed and north of the Westminster and Putney brook watersheds (most of Westminster and Putney are not drained by any rivers other than the Connecticut).

There are three notable waterfalls on the Saxtons River, listed from upriver to downriver: one in the village of Saxtons River, just below the bridge on Westminster St; another in North Westminster, also called Gageville, just below the bridge on Covered Bridge Rd; and Twin Falls, a short distance downriver from the previous falls in North Westminster near Forest Rd.[5][6]

Tributaries

File:Lower end of Saxtons River 5-6-2014 9-38-59 AM.JPG
Lower end of the Saxtons River, where it flows into the Connecticut River.

Its larger tributaries (listed from upriver to downriver) include Hinkley Brook and South Branch Saxtons River, flowing north in Grafton; Bull Creek flowing north and Weaver Brook flowing south, near Cambridgeport; Leach Brook, flowing south along Leach Rd between Cambridgeport and the village of Saxtons River; Pleasant Valley Brook, flowing south near Pleasant Valley Rd and joining the river on the west side of the village of Saxtons River; Bolles Brook, which flows south along Rockingham Hill Rd and Pleasant St and joins the river near Oak St; and an apparently unnamed brook flowing north near Westminster West Rd and joining the river behind a trailer park.

Joining the river east of the village of Saxtons River are Marks Brook, which starts near Paradise Hill northeast of the village and flows south near Hall Bridge Rd, and Bundy Brook, which flows north near Davidson Hill Rd, crosses Back Westminster Rd where it flows over a small stone dam, and joins the river near where Vermont Route 121 is crossed by Interstate 91[7][8]

See also

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed April 1, 2011
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  5. Around Bellows Falls: Rockingham, Westminster, and Saxtons River By Anne L. Collins, Virginia Lisai, and Louise Luring. Arcadia Publishing, 2002. ISBN 978-0-7385-1033-0
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  7. Vermont Atlas and Gazetteer, Eleventh Edition, Delorme, 2003, ISBN 0-89933-322-2
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External links

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