South Starksboro Friends Meeting House and Cemetery

The interior has an entry vestibule across its width, which leads into the main hall, now typically arranged with pews in a circular configuration.

The interior has original bead-board wainscoting, but most of its modest stylistic elements date to the late 19th century, including kerosene lamps for lighting and a small organ.

[2] The Starksboro area was one of earliest places in Vermont to be settled by Quakers, drawn by Joseph Hoag, who had established a meeting at Danby.

Prior to that, the meeting had met at the home of David Morrison, which still stands several hundred yards north on Dan Sargent Road.

The congregation supported a minister until 1923, and the building is still the site of regular meetings, albeit on a less frequent basis than in the past.