Chartered by New Hampshire Governor
Benning Wentworth on July 10, 1761, the town was a
New Hampshire grant to David Page and 61 others. It was named after
Woodstock in
Oxfordshire, England, as a homage to both
Blenheim Palace and its owner,
George Spencer, 4th Duke of Marlborough. The town was first settled in 1768 by James Sanderson and his family. In 1776,
Joab Hoisington built a
gristmill, followed by a
sawmill, on the south branch of the
Ottauquechee River. The town was incorporated in 1837. Although the
Revolution slowed settlement, Woodstock developed rapidly once the war ended in 1783. The
Vermont General Assembly met here in 1807 before moving the next year to the new capital at
Montpelier. Waterfalls in the Ottauquechee River provided water power to operate mills. Factories made
scythes and axes,
carding machines, and woolens. There was a machine shop and gunsmith shop. Manufacturers also produced furniture, wooden wares, window sashes and blinds. Carriages, horse harnesses, saddles, luggage trunks and leather goods were also manufactured. By 1859, the population was 3,041. The
Industrial Revolution helped the town grow prosperous. The economy is now largely driven by
tourism. Woodstock has the 20th highest
per-capita income of Vermont towns as reported by the United States Census, and a high percentage of homes owned by non-residents. The town's central square, called the Green, is bordered by restored late
Georgian,
Federal Style, and
Greek Revival houses. The cost of real estate in the district adjoining the Green is among the highest in the state. The seasonal presence of wealthy second-home owners from cities such as
Boston and
New York has contributed to the town's economic vitality and livelihood, while at the same time diminished its accessibility to native Vermonters. The town maintains a free community wi-fi internet service that covers most of the village of Woodstock, dubbed "Wireless Woodstock". File:Woodstock, Vermont from Mount Tom.jpg|Village from
Mount Tom in 1913 File:The Norman Williams Public Library, Woodstock, VT.jpg|Norman Williams Public Library , built in 1883–1884 File:Old Woodstock Inn, Woodstock, VT.jpg|Original Woodstock Inn in 1907, open from 1892 to the late 1960s File:Store Front early 1900's.jpg|
F. H. Gillingham & Sons, Elm Street, early 1900s ==Layout and design==