Vermont
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Welcome to the Vermont Collection
The Vermont Collection serves as a dedicated repository for academic and historical materials related to the state of Vermont. This Collection encompasses research studies, historical accounts, and scholarly works that explore Vermont's unique heritage, societal developments, and cultural history.
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Item Open Access 1908 Vt. Acts & Resolves 132–33, No. 147, § 1(General Publisher, 1908)No person shall at any time hunt, shoot, pursue, take or kill any of the wild animals, wild fowl or birds of this state, nor use a gun for hunting the same, without having first procured a license therefor as hereinafter provided, and then only during the respective periods of the year when it shall be lawful, and subject to all the provisions of chapter 220 of the Public StatutesItem Open Access 1900 Vt. Acts and Resolves 210, No. 178, § 10, pt. 15.(General Publisher, 1900)To regulate and restrain the use and sale of rockets, squibs, fire-crackers, toy pistols, or other fire-works within the village, also guns, cannon and explosives.Item Open Access 1900 Vt. Acts and Resolves 145, No. 162, § 42.(General Publisher, 1900)Said board of fire wardens may inspect the manner of manufacturing and keeping gun powder, lime, ashes, matches, lights, fireworks or combustibles[.]Item Open Access Ch. 13, § 21; Ch. 22*, §§ 14-15; Ch. 35, § 7, ST. ALBANS DAILY MESSENGER SUPPLEMENT, Aug. 7, 1897, at 1, 3-10 (St. Albans, Vermont).(General Publisher, 1897)No person, except on his own premises, or by the consent of the owner or occupant of the premises, or in the performance of some duty required by law, shall discharge any gun, pistol or other firearm loaded with ball or shot, or with powder only, or squibs or fire-crackers, serpent, or other preparation whereof gun-powder or other explosive substance is an ingredient, or which consists wholly of the same, within the principal inhabited parts of the city, or within twenty-five rods of any dwelling house therein, nor shall make any bonfire in or upon any street, lane or public place within the city, except by permission of the city councilItem Open Access BARRE, VERMONT, CHARTER AND ORDINANCES OF THE CITY, ch. 38, § 7 at 116, 117 (1904 Vermont Watchman Co.) (Passed 1895).(General Publisher, 1895)No person shall carry within the city any steel or brass knuckles, pistol, slung shot, stilletto, or weapon of similar character, nor carry any weapon concealed on his person without permission of the mayor or chief of police in writing."Item Open Access BARRE, VERMONT, CHARTER AND ORDINANCES OF THE CITY, ch. 14, § 18 at 48, 53 (1904 Vermont Watchman Co.) (Passed 1895).(General Publisher, 1895)No person, except on his own premises, or by the consent and permission of the owner or occupant of the premises, and except in the performance of some duty required by law, shall discharge any gun, pistol, or other fire arm loaded with ball or shot, or with powder only, or firecrackers, serpent, or other preparation whereof gunpowder or other explosive substance is an ingredient, or which consists wholly of the same, nor shall make any bonfire in or upon any street, lane, common or public place within the city, except by authority of the city council.Item Open Access Leon G. Bagley, Charter and Ordinances of the City of Rutland, Together with Extracts from Certain State Laws Applicable to the Affairs of the City. Also the Rules and Order of Business of the City Council and of the Board of Aldermen, and a Register of Municipal Officers, at 153, ch. 20, § 19 (1894)(General Publisher, 1894)No person shall, except in the performance of some duty required by law, discharge any gun, pistol, or other fire arm loaded with ball or shot, or with powder only, or squibs, or fire-crackers, serpent, or other preparation whereof gun-powder or other explosive substance is an ingredient, or which consists wholly of the same, within the principal inhabited parts of the city, or within twenty-five rods of any dwelling-house therein, nor shall make any bonfire in or upon any street, lane, common or public place within the city, except by authority of the city council.Item Open Access Act of Incorporation and By-Laws of the Village of Northfield Page 20, Image 20 (1894) [Ordinances of the Village of Northfield,] By-Laws, Article XVII, Shooting with Firearms, § 1.(General Publisher, 1894)No person shall be allowed to shoot with fire-arms at a mark or otherwise, unless upon his own premises, and then in such a manner that the range of his shot shall be confined to his own grounds, under a penalty of five dollars for each offence. Provided that any person may shoot blank charges upon days of public celebration.Item Open Access Leon G. Bagley, Charter and Ordinances of the City of Rutland, Together with Extracts from Certain State Laws Applicable to the Affairs of the City. Also the Rules and Order of Business of the City Council and of the Board of Aldermen, and a Register of Municipal Officers, at 193, ch. 22, § 40 (1894)(General Publisher, 1894)No person shall keep in any building or place within the city, excepting in such magazine or place of storage as may be provided by or under the direction of the city council, any greater quantity than twenty-five pounds of gunpowder, nitro-glycerine or other like compound for a longer period than twenty-four hours.Item Open Access Act of Incorporation and By-Laws of the Village of Northfield Page 19-20, Image 19-20 (1894) Regulations for Handling Explosives, Artcle XV., § 1.(General Publisher, 1894)No person shall at any time keep within the limits of said Village, any powder, or guncotton, without a written license, signed by a majority of the trustees, who shall have discretionary power to grant the same for retailing purposes