Landscape Change Program
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uvmlandscape.bsky.social
Landscape Change Program
@uvmlandscape.bsky.social
The Landscape Change Program is an online archive of over 70,000 images providing an interdisciplinary look at the past and present Vermont’s landscape
🔗 landscape.uvm.edu
Fall hasn’t ended yet!
Taken in October of 1985, this black and white photo depicts a “colorful” pumpkin patch.

📷 October 9th, 1985: “Pumpkin Patch”

Find more historical photos on our website, 🔗 in bio
November 14, 2025 at 8:51 PM
From the 1800s to this century, “View of Chin from the Lips, Mount Mansfield” represents the Landscape Change Program’s mission: to preserve and present images of Vermont landscapes as they were and as they are.

See how Vermont landscapes have changed on our website, 🔗 in bio
November 12, 2025 at 9:25 PM
The leaves have fallen, the first snow has arrived, and Vermont is ready for ski season.
This photo, taken in November of 1980 and titled “First Snow on Warden Farm, 1980”, depicts 2 trucks in front of a wooden fence covered in fresh snow.

📷 Dave Warden

🔗 in bio for more historical photos
November 11, 2025 at 6:21 PM
The Great Flood of 1927, which occurred from November 2nd to 4th, destroyed over 1,000 bridges and caused over $50 million (in 1927 USD) in damages across the state of Vermont.

Find more historical photos on our website, 🔗 in bio
November 10, 2025 at 7:48 PM
This aerial photo from before 2000 encompasses the entirety of the Breadloaf Campus of Middlebury College and showcases Vermont’s beautiful fall foliage.

📷 Henry Sheldon Museum: “Aerial of Breadloaf Campus in Fall”

Find more historical photos on our website, 🔗 in bio
November 4, 2025 at 5:06 PM
November 3rd, 1927, the Winooski River flooded along with other rivers throughout New England. This disaster struck Vermont the hardest, with 84 of the 85 total deaths being Vermonters, including the state’s Lieutenant Governor at the time, Samuel Hollister Jackson.
November 4, 2025 at 1:25 AM