Historical U.S. Census totals for Orleans County, Vermont

This article shows U.S. Census totals for Orleans County, Vermont, broken down by municipality, from 1900 to 2000. The county population reached a 20th-century low in 1960, 20,143, and has increased its population ever since.

Like most areas of New England, Orleans County is (and has been at all times since well before the 20th century) entirely divided into incorporated municipalities. There is no unincorporated territory.

There are three types of incorporated municipalities in Vermont: towns, cities and villages. As in the other New England states, towns are the basic unit of municipal government. Cities are independent of and equivalent to towns, but differ in their form of government. Villages overlay towns and assume responsibility for some municipal services within their boundaries. Incorporated villages are not found in any of the other New England states, and are less common in Vermont today than they have been in the past. A number of villages have disincorporated over the years, choosing to revert to full town control; most of those that remain are very small.

It is possible for a village to become a city, in which case it becomes a completely separate municipality from its original parent town. Many of Vermont’s current cities are former villages (unlike the other New England states where cities are almost invariably former towns). If a village bearing the same name as its parent town becomes a city, the result is an adjacent town and city that have the same name but are completely separate municipalities. There is one such example in Orleans County. The present-day city of Newport had its origins in an incorporated village within the town of Newport. When the village became a city, however, it ceased to be part of the town, and the town and city are now two distinct municipalities with no overlap or relationship to one another.

The main tables below show municipalities at the town level, differentiating between towns and cities. For any census, adding up the totals for each town-level municipality should yield the county total. A separate section follows with population totals for villages from 1930 to 2000.

For more information on the New England municipal system, see New England town.

Corporate changes since 1900

1900

County Total: 22,024

1910

County Total: 23,337

1920

County Total: 23,913

1930

County Total: 23,036

1940

County Total: 21,718

1950

County Total: 21,190

1960

County Total: 20,143

1970

County Total: 20,153

1980

County Total: 23,440

1990

County Total: 24,053

2000

County Total: 26,277

Villages

This section lists census totals for incorporated villages for 1930 through 2000.

As of 1930, Orleans County contained nine incorporated villages:

The village of Newport Center disincorporated in 1931, and the villages of Glover and West Glover both disincorporated in 1973.

Note: Complete data for 1900, 1910 and 1920 are not available, but the population of the village of Newport was 1,874 in 1900 and 2,548 in 1910 (by the time of the 1920 Census, the village of Newport had incorporated as a city). The population of the village of West Derby, which consolidated with the village of Newport at the time the latter became a city, was 913 in 1900 and 1,109 in 1910.

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

See also

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