ATTENTION - FEMA PUBLIC NOTICE - This Final Public Notice has a 15-day comment period, after which FEMA will evaluate and address any comments received as part of the environmental review documentation for this project.
Chartered on November 8, 1780, as part of the Vermont Charter. The original name of the town was Littleton but was changed to Waterford after New Hampshire gave the town across the Connecticut River the same name. The town's first history book, written by Dr. C. E. Harris, says the name change was "to prevent confusion with Littleton, N.H.; also because there were two practicable fords in town across the Connecticut River," places where the river could be bridged, as it soon was, and is today.
Waterford's early settlers created several districts of town, with names like Upper Waterford (the village "up" the Connecticut River), Lower Waterford, West Waterford, and Waterford Hollow. When Moore Dam, built for hydroelectric power and dedicated in 1957, created a lake at Upper Waterford, the famous "White Village" of Lower Waterford became the town center, with the library and town office.