Hyde Park,
Vermont
Hyde Park was another one of the grants to
Revolutionary War veterans from Connecticut, and, like Elmore and Wolcott, Hyde Park was
named for its principal grantee, Captain Jedediah Hyde. The Captain's son, Jedediah Jr.
and other members of the Hyde family were also named. Captain Hyde originally lived in
Norwich, Connecticut, and during the Revolutionary War he served in both the army and the
navy, having been at the Battle of Bunker Hill, among other engagements. About the time
that Hyde Park was chartered, he and his wife moved to Vermont. They lived in Pawlet and
Poultney for some years before they moved on to their new town. One of their sons, Arunah
Hyde, stayed in the southern part of the state and became sheriff of Castleton where the
village of Hydeville derives its name from his branch of the family.
There is a tradition in town that Hyde Park was
originally supposed to have been named Wilkes, probably in honor of John Wilkes, a strong
supporter of American independence in England. Before the charter was recorded the name
was changed to Hyde's Park (the 's was dropped very early) to honor Captain Hyde.
The Hyde Park name had several connotations to
have recommended it to the proprietors aside from the fact that it honored their leader.
Hyde Park in England was noted as an attractive outdoor recreation spot for fashionable
Londoners; Hyde Park in New York state was equally well known. Then there was the man whom
King George III had appointed to try to negotiate a settlement of the Boston Tea Party
disturbance: Thomas Villiers, styled Lord Hyde until he succeeded his father as the second
Earl of Clarendon in 1786. Lord Hyde hadn't managed to reach a solution for the Americans,
but most historians agree that he did try.
One of the most often repeated stories in town is
about how Hyde Park village came to be known as "Hide Center": Carroll S. Page,
Vermont's one-time governor (1890-92) and US Senator (1909-23), was one of the largest
dealers in hides and skins in the world. During his greatest period of activity, Hyde Park
became one of the major tanning centers in the country. Page himself was nick-named
"Calf Skin Page," and in turn he called his village Hide Center. Child's 1883
Gazetteer carried a full-page advertisement that said, among other things, "active
farmer's boys can occupy the spring months in picking up dairy skins." A good many
boys paid for their clothes and schooling with the money Page paid to "such as can
give a satisfactory guaranty that funds furnished will not be misappropriated."