Goodbye to a Yankee Farmer, the Ghost of Exit 8
The New York Times
In 1964, a Vermont farmer burned himself and his farm, rather than surrender his land. His neighbors can’t let him go.
WEATHERSFIELD, Vt. — The morning sun was just slanting through the trees when a crew arrived with chain saws to remove the last sign of Romaine Tenney. It was only a tree, a gnarled rock maple that stood for generations on the Tenney farm, and somehow survived what happened there on that September night in 1964. Now Vermont had ordered the tree cut down. A chain saw began to whine, and clouds of sawdust bloomed into the air. Then the first limbs began to fall, light and springy, coming to rest in a shower of twigs.More Related News