Video: White River Junction – A Town at the Crossroads
Tuesday, July 17th, 2012Many small towns have lost their economic engines. This one re-invented itself. How did White River Junction do it?
A collaboration in cartoons and sound by State of the Re:Union production intern Katrina Roi and Center for Cartoon Studies artist Sophie Goldstein.
Reporter’s Notebook
Katrina Roi
I went to college five miles up the road from White River Junction. I would take the train home several times a year, and WRJ was my station. I would arrive at the platform, tuckered out after 14 hours of clattering along outdated rails, and I’d spend a few minutes waiting for a friend or a taxi to pick me up. Then I’d leave. To me, like many others, White River Junction was just a waypoint.
Five years later, the editor at Seven Days newspaper in Burlington mentioned that White River Junction had seen a bit of a renaissance. When my boyfriend came to Vermont a month later, we decided to swing by and check out the town. We went to the Tip Top Café and enjoyed a delicious meal of duck and a flavorful salad. We stopped in at the Tuckerbox Café for a cup of coffee that rivaled the product of our favorite Seattle coffee shops. In the afternoon, we peeked into the Main Street Museum. The flood had ravaged the place, but many items had been returned to their cases. And we marveled at the unusual and wonderful displays that we saw.
Throughout, I kept thinking, when did this place get to be so cool?!
I returned to White River Junction to interview several of the people who helped turn the town around. Along the way, I found out about The Center for Cartoon Studies, America’s premier cartoon school. The school is located in a refurbished department store building right in downtown White River Junction, and it’s the place to go if you want to be a graphic artist. I asked Sophie Goldstein, a student at the school, to create a set of illustrations to accompany the audio I had collected.

Our goal was to marry cartoons and audio in a way that would draw the viewer into the world of White River Junction. I blended voices, music, train whistles and earthquake rumbles to create layers of sound. Sophie’s art brought to life the quirky, independent spirit of the town. Together, the images and sound created a richer, more playful portrait of White River Junction than we could have made with audio or pictures alone.
White River Junction has a lot of personality, and that kept this project invigorating and fun. Working with a cartoon artist made me excited to keep trying new ways to tell stories.
I know that next time I visit my college, I’ll be swinging through White River Junction for a great cup of coffee and a stop at the zany Main Street Museum!
Katrina graduated from Dartmouth College in 2008 with a degree in Geography and Healthcare. After college, she spent three years working as a consultant a health care cooperative. Then she decided to pursue her long-time desire to become a doctor. These days, Katrina is taking science classes in Baltimore and getting ready to apply to medical school. A few years ago, she also discovered a love for radio. She attended the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies in 2011, and is currently working on another illustration/audio project (in between chemistry tests). She has a serious dose of wanderlust, and has worked/lived in France, Syria, Morocco and Ecuador.



Quaint storefronts along Main streets, covered bridges over clear streams, cows from dairy farms dotting green valleys: across the state, these are the iconic images of Vermont. But beyond its pastoral beauty, this is a place that prides itself on its independent spirit. In this hour, we’ll hear a range of stories of the way Vermont’s “small town state” identity manifests: from finding new ways to treat mental health problems, to a gallery with a surprising monthly ritual to dealing with the most devastating natural disaster the state has ever seen.





