peakbagger said:
The American Precision Museum is nearby if you are a gearhead
http://www.americanprecision.org/
+2- and you don't even have to be a total gearhead to like that place - there's some general history, and some of the machinery there is simply gorgeous from an aesthetic design standpoint (curving buttressed castings, knurlings, cranks, knurlings, etc.) that didn't specifically have to be a certain shape, but that are a lot more attractive because they are)
Cornish Colony Museum - Windsor, VT, especially if you like Maxfield Parrish's art :
www.cornishcolonymuseum.org
Montshire Museum in Norwich VT
Dartmouth and its various cultural trappings are not far in Hanover NH (but prices are metropolitan-scale compared to the things I mention below):
VT Institute of Natural Science "(VINS") in Quechee VT, including their Raptor Center where they rehab hawks and owls, etc.
Harpoon Brewing in Windsor VT
Long Trail Brewing in Bridgewater VT
- a bit further afield from Brownsville, but also excellent:
Fairbanks Museum, St Johnsbury, VT (and while in STJ, check out the Athenaeum, which is the Town Library and has an astonishing collection of mid-to-late 18th century paintings, including the original of this, which is not only huge, but gorgeous
(broken link removed to http://www.stjathenaeum.org/gallery_images/domes_of_yosemite.htm)
Stop at Anthony's Diner on Railroad ST while in STJ for some great food, especially the WoodsmanBurger; it's next to the McDonalds by the Movie Theater at the foot of Eastern Ave.
If you feel like heading further north and east, you might want to go up US RTE 2 and cross over at Lancaster; there's a good group antique shop in the middle of nowhere called Potato Barn Antiques that has cool stuff at prices that are a fraction of what you'd see nearer to tourist areas. Then head up 26 to Colebrook NH, and turn east towards Dixville Notch, where you'll find "The Balsams" which is an amazing post-civil war Grand Hotel that is now heated by biomass via a co-generation facility that also makes electricity. This is the location of the first presidential primary results in NH, which are either the first or some of the first in the entire US, and the both the Hotel and the road/ notch are gorgeous.
on the way back from STJ and/ or Dixville Notch, a bit of a side-jog, go to Cabot Creamery in Cabot for a tour and free samples of cheese, then take VT Route 15 to Morrisville, then take VT 100 through Stowe and then to Waterbury, where you can get the Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream tour.
From there, or as a separate jaunt, hit Jericho VT
(broken link removed to http://snowflakebentley.com/museum2.htm)
Rock of Ages' granite quarries and visitors center in Barre VT are very impressive, and I hear that the VT Granite Museum is good; Hope Cemetary contains some truly remarkable monuments that the stonecutters have made for themselves and their families. DO lock your car there, as unfortunately some local neer-do-wells apparently hide in the bushes and grab valuables if you're out strolling among the stones.
Montpelier is the smallest capital in the US, but a great place to visit
Fairlee VT has a drive in with motel
Lake Willoughby is gorgeous and offers a great moderately challenging but highly rewarding hike up Mt. Pisgah on its eastern side.
Jay Peak is an interesting place to see and I think that they have a tram (so does Stowe, but IMO it's touristy/ spendy, less authentic); Great Falls is near there and really worth a visit if you are in the vicinity (see mention of waterfalls below)
As long as you and your companions don't get car sick, Smugglers Notch on VT 108 near Stowe, the Appalachian Gap on VT 117 near Waitsfield, and Lincoln Gap
Some really good waterfalls are here there and everywhere around VT, and you can find some more info on
www.northeastwaterfalls.com
Any of the minor highways to and fro between any of the above and back to Brownsville are likely to take you through some nice villages and farmland.
Down more to the south/ west
www.vermont-marble.com
Last but very definitely not least, in the heart of northern VT is Adamant, which is tiny in size but brimming with some good stuff, including some tasty Friday night cookouts with great food and some really eclectic company [loggers to artists who all get along and relate] starting soon after July 4:
http://www.adamantcoop.org/
http://www.adamant.org/
(broken link removed to http://www.adamant.org/quarryworks.htm)
You could accuse me of bias about Adamant, but it's sort of the other way around, 20 years ago, the place drew me in as if it had a force field, and you couldn't drag me away with a log skidder.