Victory, Essex County, Vermont Genealogy

Brief History
Victory was chartered on September 6, 1781 by the Vermont Legislature.

In 1970 there were only 42 residents, but eighty years earlier the place had been rather busy. Heavily timbered, it had been a magnet for the lumbermen; later, large quantities of potatoes were grown for starch and alchohol. In its heyday, there were seven villages, three post offices, five schools, six lumber mills, a starch factory, a granite quarry, four railroad stations and a hotel, plus various boarding houses for the factory and mill workers. Today, there are only a few more people than forty years ago. The population at the 2010 US Census was 62.

Victory made national news in 1963 when electricity was installed in the town for the first time, one of the last two towns in the state to get power.

Town Histories
Go to Archive.org to find published materials for this town.

Vital Records
FamilySearch Historical Records Collection has Vermont birth, death, and marriage records online.

Probate Records
The probate district for Victory is Essex. Essex Probate Court Main St. Box 426 Island Pond, VT 05846 Phone: (802) 723-4770

City Directories
1888 Victory Town Directory

Cemeteries
The following is a list of major cemeteries in present-day Victory. For location of all cemeteries, see Cemeteries of Vermont, Essex County, website at this link.


 * Shores Cemetery - inscriptions at Find A Grave site.
 * Victory Cemetery - inscriptions at Find A Grave site.
 * Victory Hill Cemetery - inscriptions at Find A Grave site.

Town Records
The Family History Library has microfilm of original records from the Victory Town Clerk's Office. These include Records of births, marriages, and deaths, v. A-B, 1857-1882; indexes to births, deaths, marriages, 1856-1968.

Victory Town Clerk 102 Radar Road Box 609 North Concord, VT 05858 Phone: (802) 328-2400 Email: townofvictory@wildblue.net

Libraries and Historical Societies
Northeast Kingdom Genealogy - Genealogy resources for towns in the counties of Essex, Orleans and Caledonia.