The handful of buildings at the head of Vaughn Hollow Road hardly makes a “city.” Rice City, however, does take in much countryside, for which a booster like the tavernkeeper Samuel Rice in the 1790s imagined a grand future. Halfway between Providence and Norwich, Connecticut, it was the location of a turnpike tollbooth (which still stands on Plainfield Pike as a rare example of the type), several inns and taverns, and a number of small mills. Today the ensemble counts for more than the individual buildings. First in the village cluster, which barely denotes a center today, comes number 25 Vaughn Hollow Road, a pretty but much restored house of 1804. Adjacent on a corner of the site is a very early school building. The Democrat School (before 1812), moved from another site to 25 Vaughn Hollow Road, is the most important structure in the village simply because one-room schoolhouses of such an early date are extremely rare. Originating as a private school and built by subscription, it was sold to the public in 1817 and served as the
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Rice City
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