Greensboro is the southernmost town in Orleans County, Vermont, United States.
However, there is no evidence that he ever visited the town, and his land was sold for non-payment of taxes a few decades after he received it.
[4]:18 The Bayley Hazen Military Road, built before the town was chartered, allowed its development.
The road passed to the west of Caspian Lake, and a wooden blockhouse was constructed there in 1779[4]:21-22[5] on what is now known as Block House Hill[4]:frontispiece.
[6] In the early 20th century, a development near the Highland Lodge contained restrictive covenants in the title forbidding subsequent resale to Jews.
It had a beach on Caspian Lake with sailboats, kayaks, and canoes; children's play programs and nature programs in the summer and nature hikes and cross-country ski trails in the winter.
Special events included wedding, business retreats, music programs, workshops, and talks.
It was largely closed in 2011,[7] being open only for room and cottage rentals, but a group of investors purchased the property in December 2016 and have reopened the Lodge and restaurant seasonally.
The Greensboro Arts Alliance and Residency (GAAR), the summer wing of The Mirror Theater Ltd, was formed here in 2005 to mix professional Mirror Repertory Company members with local community members.
[10] In 2016, GAAR performed the American premiere of Joshua Sobol's Sinners, directed by Brian Cox, in Greensboro.
The Greensboro Association was founded in 1934 to conceive, advance, and support village initiatives and organizations.
Greensboro was the setting of a short film called The Abels House is Green[13] directed by part-time resident Duncan M. Rogers.