Park Passport

Marsh - Billings - Rockefeller National Historical Park VT

Lat, Long: 43.63348732, -72.53424638

Designation: National Historical Park

Walk through one of Vermont's most beautiful landscapes, under the shade of sugar maples and 400-year-old hemlocks, across covered bridges and alongside rambling stone walls. This is a landscape of loss, recovery, and conservation. This is a story of stewardship, of people taking care of places - sharing an enduring connection to land and a sense of hope for the future.

Weather:

The weather in Vermont is dramatic and varied depending on location, terrain, distance from a body of water like Lake Champlain, and elevation and can change from year to year. In the Woodstock area, summer daily high temperatures range between 60 to 80 degrees, with some days reaching into the 90s. Winter is Vermont's longest season and temps in winter vary more than those in summer. Common to experience freezing temperatures from Nov to March, many sub-zero days, seasonal snowfall averages 80 inches.

Directions:

Parking is at the Billings Farm & Museum Overflow Parking lot. If using a GPS, please enter "69 Old River Rd, Woodstock, VT 05091". If you'd like to watch the park film, begin your visit at the Billings Farm & Museum Visitor Center. To enter the National Park, take the paved path to the right of the Billings Farm & Museum Visitor Center, walk up and cross the street, and then take the left fork to reach the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park Carriage Barn Visitor Center.

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Address/Contact:

Billings Farm & Museum Parking Lot

Woodstock, US, 05091

Phone: 802-457-3368

Email: mabi_visitorservices@nps.gov

Entrance Fees:

Winter sports at the parkHikers enjoying fall foliage during a park eventtwo horses plugging logging cart with logger wearing hard hatformal four square garden in full bloom from above with two people looking at flowersPark Ranger talks to group of park visitors on the porch of the Marsh-Billlings-Rockefeller mansionlarge red brick mansion with white lattice porch and lush green lawnPark Ranger points to a trail sign and talks to a group of young children