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                             Salisbury Bancorp, Inc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)


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                             SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                                  MAY 16, 2007




                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                            Page
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING
         INTRODUCTION.........................................................4
OUTSTANDING STOCK AND VOTING RIGHTS...........................................4
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT
     AND RELATED SHAREHOLDER MATTERS..........................................5
         Equity Compensation Plan Information.................................6
         Executive Officers...................................................6
         Principal Shareholders of the Company................................6
PROPOSAL 1 - ELECTION OF DIRECTORS............................................7
         Nominees and Board of Directors and Director Independence............7
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE..........................................................9
         Committees of the Board of Directors.................................9
         Code of Ethics.......................................................11
         Directors' Attendance................................................11
         Board of Directors' Communications with Shareholders.................12
         Audit Committee Report...............................................12
         Human Resources and Compensation Committee Report....................13
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION........................................................13
         Compensation Discussion and Analysis.................................13
                  Introduction................................................13
                  Compensation Philosophy.....................................13
                  Current Compensation........................................14
Post-Employment Compensation..................................................15
COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS............................................17
         Summary Compensation Table...........................................17
             Pension Benefits Table...........................................18
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control......................19
BOARD OF DIRECTOR COMPENSATION................................................21
         Director Compensation Table..........................................21
         Directors' Fees......................................................21
         Directors' Stock Retainer Plan.......................................21
         Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.......................22
         Indebtedness of Management and Others................................22
         Policies and Procedures for the Review, Approval or Ratification of
             Transactions with Related Persons................................22
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE.......................22
PROPOSAL 2 - RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF
     INDEPENDENT AUDITORS.....................................................23
PROPOSAL 3 - OTHER BUSINESS...................................................24
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS..............................24
SHAREHOLDER INFORMATION.......................................................25
Appendix A - Audit Committee Charter..........................................26

                                       2


                             SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.
                                5 BISSELL STREET
                                 P. O. BOX 1868
                          LAKEVILLE, CONNECTICUT 06039
                                 (860) 435-9801


                  NOTICE OF 2007 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 16, 2007

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the 2007 Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Salisbury
Bancorp, Inc. (the "Company"),  will be held at 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday,  May 16,
2007 at the Interlaken Inn, 74 Interlaken Road, in Lakeville,  Connecticut,  for
the following purposes:

1.       To elect three (3)  Directors  for a three (3) year term who,  with the
         six (6)  directors  whose  terms do not  expire at this  meeting,  will
         constitute the full Board of Directors of the Company.

2.       To ratify the  appointment  of  Shatswell,  MacLeod & Company,  P.C. as
         independent  auditors for the Company for the year ending  December 31,
         2007.

3.       To  transact  such  other  business  as may  properly  come  before the
         meeting, or any adjournment(s) thereof.

         Only those  Shareholders of record at the close of business on the 23rd
day of March,  2007 are  entitled  to notice  of,  and to vote at,  this  Annual
Meeting or any adjournment  thereof. In order that you may be represented at the
meeting,  please  complete,  date, sign and mail promptly the enclosed proxy for
which a postage-prepaid return envelope is provided.

                                           BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
                                           SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.

                                           /s/  John F. Foley

                                           John F. Foley
                                           Secretary


April 16, 2007
Lakeville, CT

SHAREHOLDERS  ARE REQUESTED TO MARK, DATE, SIGN AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AS
SOON AS POSSIBLE  REGARDLESS  OF WHETHER  THEY PLAN TO ATTEND THE  MEETING.  ANY
----------------
PROXY GIVEN BY A SHAREHOLDER  MAY BE REVOKED AT ANY TIME BEFORE IT IS EXERCISED,
AND ANY  SHAREHOLDER WHO EXECUTES AND RETURNS A PROXY AND WHO ATTENDS THE ANNUAL
MEETING  MAY  WITHDRAW  THE PROXY AT ANY TIME BEFORE IT IS VOTED AND VOTE HIS OR
HER SHARES IN PERSON.  A PROXY MAY BE REVOKED BY GIVING NOTICE TO JOHN F. FOLEY,
SECRETARY OF THE COMPANY, IN WRITING PRIOR TO THE TAKING OF A VOTE.


                                       3


                             SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.
                                5 BISSELL STREET
                               LAKEVILLE, CT 06039
                                 (860) 435-9801

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                     FOR 2007 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                                  May 16, 2007

                                  INTRODUCTION

         The  enclosed  proxy card (the  "Proxy") is  solicited  by the Board of
Directors (the "Board of Directors") of Salisbury Bancorp, Inc. (the "Company"),
for use at the 2007 Annual Meeting of Shareholders  (the "Annual Meeting") to be
held on  Wednesday,  May 16,  2007,  at 4:00 p.m.,  at the  Interlaken  Inn,  74
Interlaken Road,  Lakeville,  Connecticut 06039, and at any and all adjournments
thereof.  Any Proxy given may be revoked at any time before it is actually voted
on any  matter in  accordance  with the  procedures  set forth on the  Notice of
Annual  Meeting.  This Proxy  Statement and the enclosed form of Proxy are being
mailed to shareholders (the "Shareholders") on or about April 16, 2007. The cost
of  preparing,  assembling  and mailing  this Proxy  Statement  and the material
enclosed  herewith is being borne by the Company.  In  addition,  proxies may be
solicited by directors, officers and employees of the Company and Salisbury Bank
and Trust  Company (the  "Bank")  personally  by  telephone or other means.  The
Company will reimburse  banks,  brokers,  and other  custodians,  nominees,  and
fiduciaries for their reasonable and actual costs in sending the proxy materials
to the beneficial owners of the Company's common stock (the "Common Stock").

         If your shares are in a brokerage or fiduciary account,  your broker or
bank will send you a voting  instruction form instead of a Proxy.  Please follow
the  instructions  on such form to instruct your broker or bank how to vote your
shares.  If you wish to attend the meeting  and vote your shares in person,  you
must follow the instructions on the voting  instructions  form to obtain a legal
proxy from your broker or bank.

                       OUTSTANDING STOCK AND VOTING RIGHTS

         The Board of  Directors  has fixed the close of  business  on March 23,
2007  as  the  record  date  (the  "Record  Date")  for  the   determination  of
Shareholders  entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting. As of the
Record Date,  1,684,181 shares of the Company's Common Stock (par value $.10 per
share) were outstanding and entitled to vote and held of record by approximately
733  Shareholders of Record.  Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote
on  all  matters  to  be  presented  at  the  Annual  Meeting.  Votes  withheld,
abstentions and broker non-votes are not treated as having voted in favor of any
proposal and are counted only for  purposes of  determining  whether a quorum is
present at the Annual Meeting.

         A proxy card is enclosed for your use.  YOU ARE  SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS TO COMPLETE,  DATE, SIGN AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD IN THE
ACCOMPANYING ENVELOPE, which is postage-prepaid if mailed in the United States.

         If the enclosed form of Proxy is properly  executed and received by the
Company  in time to be

                                       4


voted at the Annual  Meeting,  the shares  represented  thereby will be voted in
accordance with the instructions marked thereon.  Executed, but unmarked proxies
will be voted "FOR" Proposals 1 and 2 discussed in this Proxy  Statement.  As of
the date of this Proxy  Statement,  the Board of Directors and management do not
know of any matters other than those  described in the Notice of Annual  Meeting
that are to come before the Annual  Meeting.  If any other  matters are properly
brought before the Annual Meeting,  the persons named in the proxy will vote the
shares  represented  by such proxy upon such matters as determined by a majority
of the Board of Directors.

                      SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND
                           RELATED SHAREHOLDER MATTERS

         The following table sets forth certain information as of March 23, 2007
regarding  the  number  of shares of  Common  Stock  beneficially  owned by each
director and executive officer of the Company and by all Directors and executive
officers of the Company as a group.



                                                    Amount and Nature of
        Name of Beneficial Owner                  Beneficial Ownership (1)                  Percent of Class (2)
        ------------------------                  ------------------------                  --------------------
                                                                                           
Louis E. Allyn, II                                        1,226 (3)                                 .07%
John R. H. Blum                                          15,925 (4)                                 .95%
Louise F. Brown                                           2,688 (5)                                 .16%
Richard J. Cantele, Jr.                                   3,006 (6)                                 .18%
Robert S. Drucker                                         7,578 (7)                                 .45%
John F. Foley                                             7,443 (8)                                 .44%
Nancy F. Humphreys                                        1,600 (9)                                 .10%
Holly J. Nelson                                           1,488 (10)                                .09%
John F. Perotti                                          11,354 (11)                                .67%
Michael A. Varet                                         66,246 (12)                               3.93%
----------------------------                           --------------                            -------
(All Directors and Executive                            118,714                                    7.04%
Officers of the Company as a
group of (10) persons)

-----------------------
(1)      The shareholdings also include, in certain cases, shares owned by or in
         trust for a director's spouse and/or children or grandchildren,  and in
         which all beneficial interest has been disclaimed by the director.

(2)      Percentages are based upon the 1,684,181 shares of the Company's Common
         Stock  outstanding  and  entitled  to  vote  on  March  23,  2007.  The
         definition of  beneficial  owner  includes any person who,  directly or
         indirectly,   through  any   contract,   agreement  or   understanding,
         relationship  or  otherwise,  has or shares  voting power or investment
         power with respect to such security.

(3)      All shares are owned individually by Louis E. Allyn, II.

(4)      Includes 2,100 shares owned by John R. H. Blum's wife.

(5)      All shares are owned individually by Louise F. Brown.

(6)      Includes 1,320 shares owned jointly by Richard J. Cantele,  Jr. and his
         wife and 6 shares owned by Richard J. Cantele, Jr. as custodian for his
         daughter.

(7)      Includes 1,500 shares owned by Robert S. Drucker's wife.

                                       5


(8)      Includes  3,322  shares  owned  jointly  by John F. Foley and his wife,
         1,543  owned  by his  wife and 100  shares  owned  by John F.  Foley as
         custodian for his children.

(9)      Includes  1,000  shares  owned  jointly by Nancy F.  Humphreys  and her
         husband.

(10)     Includes  6 shares  owned by Holly J.  Nelson as  guardian  for a minor
         child.

(11)     Includes  9,514 shares  owned  jointly by John F. Perotti and his wife,
         1,000  shares  owned by his wife and 564  shares  owned by his son,  of
         which John F. Perotti has disclaimed beneficial ownership.

(12)     Includes  18,540  shares which are owned by Michael A. Varet's wife and
         18,546  shares  which are owned by his  children,  of which  Michael A.
         Varet has disclaimed beneficial ownership.

Equity Compensation Plan Information
------------------------------------

         The Company  does not have any equity  compensation  plans  pursuant to
which equity  securities  are authorized  for issuance for the  compensation  of
executive  officers.  The Company has a Directors  Stock  Retainer  Plan,  which
provides  non-employee  Directors with shares of the Company's common stock as a
component of their compensation.  Such Plan is discussed further under "Board of
Director Compensation" below.

Executive Officers
------------------

         The  following  table  sets  forth  the name and age of each  Executive
Officer,  his principal  occupation  for the last five (5) years and the year in
which he was first appointed an Executive Officer of the Company.



                                                                                          Executive Officer
         Name                         Age            Position                             of the Company since:
         ----                         ---            --------                             ---------------------
                                                                                        
         John F. Perotti              60             Chairman and                                1998 (1)
                                                     Chief Executive Officer

         Richard J. Cantele, Jr.      47             President and                               2001 (2)
                                                     Chief Operating Officer

         John F. Foley                56             Chief Financial Officer,                    1998 (3)
                                                     Treasurer and Secretary

---------------
(1)      Mr.  Perotti is also the  Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
         Bank and has been an Executive Officer of the Bank since 1982.

(2)      Mr.  Cantele is also the President and Chief  Operating  Officer of the
         Bank and has been an Executive Officer of the Bank since 1989.

(3)      Mr. Foley is also the Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of the Bank
         and has been an Executive Officer of the Bank since 1986.

Principal Shareholders of the Company
-------------------------------------

         Management  is not aware of any person  (including  any "group" as that
term is used in Section  13(d)(3) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 (the
"Exchange Act") who owns beneficially more than 5% of the Company's Common Stock
as of the Record Date.

                                       6


                                   PROPOSAL 1

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         The Certificate of Incorporation  and Bylaws of the Company provide for
a Board of Directors of not less than seven (7) members, as determined from time
to time by resolution of the Board of Directors.  The Board of Directors has set
the number of  directorships  at nine (9). The Board of Directors of the Company
is divided into three (3) classes as nearly equal in number as possible. Classes
of directors  serve for staggered  three (3) year terms. A successor class is to
be elected at each annual  meeting of  stockholders  when the terms of office of
the members of one class expire.  Vacant  directorships may be filled, until the
expiration of the term of the vacated directorship, by the vote of a majority of
the  directors  then in office.  A plurality of votes cast in favor is necessary
for the election of directors.

Nominees and Board of Directors and Director Independence
---------------------------------------------------------

         There are three (3)  directorships  on the Board of Directors which are
up for election this year.  The  following  individuals  have been  nominated to
serve for a three (3) year term:  Louis E.  Allyn,  II,  Robert S.  Drucker  and
Michael A. Varet.  The three (3) nominees are presently  members of the Board of
Directors.  Unless  otherwise  directed,  the enclosed Proxy will be voted "FOR"
such  nominees.  In the event any one or more  nominees is unable or declines to
serve  (events  which are not  anticipated),  the persons named in the Proxy may
vote for some other person or persons.

         The  following  table sets forth certain  information,  as of March 23,
2007, with respect to the directors of the Company. All  directors/nominees  are
considered  "independent"  within the  meaning of the  American  Stock  Exchange
("AMEX")  independence  standards  with the  exception  of John F.  Perotti  and
Richard J. Cantele, Jr., who are executive officers of the Company and the Bank.



                         NOMINEES FOR ELECTION FOR TERMS EXPIRING IN 2007
             Name                     Age            Position Held with          Director Since
             ----                     ---               the Company              --------------
                                                        -----------
                                                                            
Louis E. Allyn, II                    59                  Director                    2004
Robert S. Drucker                     65                  Director                    2004
Michael A. Varet                      65                  Director                    1998
                          CONTINUING DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS EXPIRE IN 2008
                          -----------------------------------------------
Louise F. Brown                       63                  Director                    1998
                                                      President, Chief
Richard J. Cantele, Jr.               47             Operating Officer,               2005
                                                          Director
Nancy F. Humphreys                    65                  Director                    2001

                                       7


                          CONTINUING DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS EXPIRE IN 2009
                          -----------------------------------------------
John R. H. Blum                       77             Presiding Director               1998
Holly J. Nelson                       53                  Director                    1998
                                                       Chairman, Chief
John F. Perotti                                      Executive Officer,
                                      60                  Director                    1998


         Presented below is additional  information  concerning the directors of
the Company.  Unless  otherwise  stated,  all  directors  have held the position
described for at least five (5) years.

         Louis E. Allyn,  II has been a director  of the Bank since 2004.  He is
President of Allyndale  Corporation.  Allyndale  Corporation mines and processes
limestone into a variety of  agricultural  and lawn and garden products that are
distributed throughout southern New England and New York state.

         John R. H.  Blum is a  retired  attorney  and  former  Commissioner  of
Agriculture  for the State of  Connecticut.  He has been a director  of the Bank
since 1995 and was elected  Presiding  Director in 2005.  Prior to that,  he was
Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Company and the Bank since 1998.

         Louise F.  Brown has been a  director  of the Bank  since 1992 and is a
partner in the law firm of Ackerly Brown, LLP.

         Richard J. Cantele, Jr. is President and Chief Operating Officer of the
Company  and the  Bank.  Prior to that he served as  Executive  Vice  President,
Treasurer and Chief Operating  Officer of the Bank and Secretary of the Company.
He has been a director of the Bank since 2005.

         Robert S.  Drucker has been a director  of the Bank since  2004.  He is
proprietor of Bob's Clothing and Barrington Outfitters.

         Nancy F.  Humphreys  has been a director  of the Bank since  2001.  She
retired  from  Citigroup  New York,  Citibank  in  February  of 2000 as Managing
Director and Treasurer of Global Corporate Investment Bank North America.

         Holly J. Nelson has been a director  of the Bank since  1995.  She is a
member of Horses North, LLC, a tour operator, and is a member in Oblong Property
Management, LLC.

         John F. Perotti is Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer of the Company
and the Bank.  Prior to that he served as President and Chief Executive  Officer
of the  Company  and the Bank,  Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Operating
Officer of the Bank and prior to that,  he was Vice  President  and Treasurer of
the Bank. He has been a director of the Bank since 1985.

         Michael A. Varet is a partner in the law firm of DLA Piper US LLP.  Mr.
Varet has been a director of the Bank since 1997.

         THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSAL TO ELECT
THREE (3)  NOMINEES  TO THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  FOR A TERM OF THREE (3)  YEARS.
DIRECTORS ARE ELECTED BY A PLURALITY OF THE VOTES CAST BY THE SHARES ENTITLED TO
VOTE AT THE MEETING.  PROXIES  SOLICITED  BY THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  WILL BE SO
VOTED UNLESS SHAREHOLDERS SPECIFY A CONTRARY CHOICE ON THE PROXY CARD.

                                       8


                              CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
                              --------------------

Committees of the Board of Directors
------------------------------------

         The Board of Directors  met  thirteen  (13) times during the year 2006,
and has various committees including an Executive Committee, Human Resources and
Compensation  Committee,  Nominating  and  Governance  Committee  and  an  Audit
Committee.  The  members  of  the  committees  are  appointed  by the  Board  of
Directors.

Executive Committee

         The Executive Committee has general supervision over the affairs of the
Company between meetings of the Board of Directors. The members of the Executive
Committee  include Louis E. Allyn, II, John R. H. Blum, Louise F. Brown, John F.
Perotti,  and Michael A. Varet. The Executive  Committee did not meet separately
from the Board during the year 2006.

Human Resources and Compensation Committee

         The Human  Resources  and  Compensation  Committee is  responsible  for
reviewing the Company's general compensation strategy; establishing salaries and
reviewing benefit programs, including pensions and incentive compensation plans;
and advising the Board of Directors and making  recommendations  with respect to
such plans.  In  particular,  the  Committee  reviews and approves the Company's
Compensation strategies and objectives, reviews and makes recommendations to the
Board for its approval regarding executive  compensation,  administers incentive
plans and  reviews  and makes  recommendations  to the Board  regarding  general
employee  pension  benefit  plans and other benefit plans on an as needed basis.
The Company  strives for pay  packages  that are fair.  In  determining  whether
compensation of such officer is fair, the Committee  considers each component of
compensation  including  salary and  bonus,  stock  compensation,  amounts to be
received from any deferred  compensation,  severance,  perquisites or other.  In
establishing  levels  of  compensation,  the  Committee  endeavors  to take into
consideration an individual's performance, level of expertise, responsibilities,
length of service,  and comparable  levels of compensation paid to executives of
other  companies of comparable  size and  development  within the  industry.  No
individual  executive may  participate in the review,  discussion or decision of
the Committee regarding his or her compensation. The Committee uses the services
of Clark  Consulting  to  provide  an  external  annual  analysis  of  executive
compensation.  The members of the Committee include Louis E. Allyn, II, Nancy F.
Humphreys,  Holly J. Nelson and Michael A. Varet, all of whom are independent in
accordance  with the AMEX  independence  standards.  The  Committee met nine (9)
times  during  the year  2006.  A copy of the  Committee's  Charter,  which  the
Committee  and Board  review and assess at least  annually,  is available on the
Company's website at www.salisburybank.com.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

         No  person  who  served  as  a  member  of  the  Human   Resources  and
Compensation  Committee  during 2006 was a current or former officer or employee
of the Company or any of its subsidiaries or, except as disclosed below, engaged
in certain transactions with the Company required to be disclosed by regulations
of the SEC.  Additionally,  there were no  compensation  committee  "interlocks"
during 2006,  which  generally  means that no  executive  officer of the Company
served as a director or member of the compensation  committee of another entity,
one  of  whose  executive  officers  served  as a  director  or  member  of  the
Compensation Committee of the Company.


         From  time to  time,  the  Company  makes  loans to its  directors  and
executive  officers and related persons and entities for the financing of homes,
as well as home improvement,  consumer and commercial loans. It is the belief of
management  that these loans are made in the ordinary  course of

                                       9


business, are made on substantially the same terms, including interest rates and
collateral,  as those  prevailing at the time for comparable  transactions  with
other persons,  and neither involve more than normal risk of collectibility  nor
present other unfavorable features.

Nominating and Governance Committee

         The Nominating and  Governance  Committee is responsible  for assisting
the Board of Directors in  identifying  and  evaluating  potential  nominees for
director and recommending qualified nominees to the Board for consideration. The
Nominating and Governance  Committee  selects the director nominees to stand for
election at the Company's  annual meetings of  shareholders.  The Nominating and
Governance  Committee's  process for  identifying  and  evaluating  nominees for
director,  including  nominees  recommended by  shareholders,  has  historically
operated  informally and without any differences in the manner in which nominees
recommended by shareholders are evaluated. However, the Company's Bylaws provide
that if the Committee or Board  proposes a nominee age 72 or greater,  then such
nomination requires two-thirds approval by the full Board.

         The  Nominating  and  Governance  Committee  and the Board of Directors
consider  factors  such  as  those  summarized  below  in  evaluating   director
candidates  and believe that the Company's  Bylaws,  Nominating  and  Governance
Committee  Charter  and the  qualifications  and  considerations  such as  those
enumerated  below  provide  adequate  guidance  and  flexibility  in  evaluating
candidates.

      o  Sound  business  judgment  and  financial  sophistication  in  order to
         understand  the Company's  financial and operating  performance  and to
         provide strategic guidance to management.
      o  Business management experience.
      o  Integrity, commitment, honesty and objectivity.
      o  A general  familiarity with (i) prudent banking  principles;  (ii) bank
         operations/technology;  (iii) pertinent laws, policies and regulations;
         (iv) markets and trends  affecting the financial  services  industries;
         and (v) local economic and business opportunities.
      o  Strong  communication  skills in order to function effectively with the
         Company's constituencies.
      o  A  financial  interest  in  the  Company  as  a  shareholder.  However,
         generally, candidates should not have relationships with the Company or
         the Bank which would  disqualify  the candidate  from being  considered
         independent.
      o  Generally,  candidates should be involved in philanthropic,  education,
         business or civic leadership positions.
      o  Generally,  candidates  should be familiar  with the  geographic  areas
         served by the Company.
      o  Candidates  should  evidence a  willingness  and  commitment  to devote
         sufficient  time  and  energy  to  prepare  for and  attend  Board  and
         Committee   meetings   and  to   diligently   perform  the  duties  and
         responsibilities of service as a director.
      o  Candidates  should not have interests  which conflict with those of the
         Company or the Bank.

         The  Company  has not  paid a fee to any  third  party  or  parties  to
identify or assist in identifying or evaluating  potential  nominees.  The Board
and Nominating and Governance  Committee does not  discriminate  on the basis of
sex, race, color, gender, national origin, religion or disability in the

                                       10


evaluation of candidates.

         A copy of the Company's  written  Nominating and  Governance  Committee
Charter is available on the Company's website at www.salisburybank.com.
                                                 ---------------------

         The members of the  Nominating  and  Governance  Committee are Louis E.
Allyn,  II,  John R.  H.  Blum  and  Louise  F.  Brown.  All  such  members  are
"independent"  in  accordance  with the  independence  standards  of  AMEX.  The
Committee met two (2) times during the year 2006.  All nominees for elections as
directors  at the 2007 Annual  Meeting  were  nominated  by the  Nominating  and
Governance Committee and the Board of Directors.

Audit Committee

         Subject to the Audit Committee Charter,  attached hereto as Appendix A,
                                                                     ----------
the Audit Committee provides  assistance to the Board of Directors in fulfilling
its  responsibility to the shareholders,  potential  shareholders and investment
community relating to corporate accounting,  reporting practices of the Company,
and the quality and  integrity of the  financial  reports of the Company.  In so
doing,  it  is  the  responsibility  of  the  Audit  Committee  to  appoint  the
independent  auditors  for the Company  and to  maintain  free and open means of
communication  between the directors,  the  independent  auditors,  the internal
auditors and the financial management of the Company.

         The  responsibilities  of  the  Audit  Committee  are  governed  by the
Company's  Audit  Committee  Charter which was adopted by the Company's Board of
Directors.  Its  members  are Louis E.  Allyn,  II,  Louise F.  Brown,  Nancy F.
Humphreys,  Holly J. Nelson and Michael A. Varet.  The Audit Committee met seven
(7) times during the year 2006. As of the date of this Proxy Statement,  each of
the members of the Audit  Committee is an  "independent  director" in accordance
with the listing  standards of the AMEX.  While no member of the Audit Committee
qualifies as an "audit  committee  financial  expert" as such term is defined by
federal  securities laws and  regulations,  the Board of Directors  believes the
members  of  the  Audit  Committee  bring  diverse  educational,   business  and
professional  experience that is beneficial to the audit  committee  function of
the  Company  and the Bank and  enables  the  Audit  Committee  to  fulfill  its
responsibility.

Code of Ethics
--------------

         The Company has adopted a Code of Ethics that applies to the  Company's
Chief  Executive  Officer and Chief  Financial  Officer.  A copy of such Code of
Ethics is available upon request,  without charge,  by writing to John F. Foley,
Chief  Financial  Officer and Secretary,  Salisbury  Bank and Trust  Company,  5
Bissell Street, P. O. Box 1868, Lakeville, Connecticut 06039.

Directors' Attendance
---------------------

         During 2006 no Director attended fewer than 75% of the aggregate of (1)
the total number of meetings of the  Company's  Board of Directors  which he/she
was  entitled  to  attend,  and (2) the  total  number of  meetings  held by all
committees  of the  Company's  Board of Directors on which  he/she  served.  The
Company does not maintain an  attendance  policy for  Directors at the Company's
annual  meetings,  but  encourages  all Directors to do so. All Directors of the
Company attended the Company's annual meeting on May 10, 2006.

                                       11


Board of Directors' Communications with Shareholders
----------------------------------------------------

         The  Company's  Board of Directors  does not have a formal  process for
shareholders to send  communications to the Board.  However,  the volume of such
communications  has  historically  been  de  minimus.   Accordingly,  the  Board
considers the Company's informal process to be adequate to address the Company's
needs.  Historically,  such  informal  process has  functioned  as follows:  the
recipient of a  shareholder  communication  would forward it to the Chairman and
Chief  Executive  Officer  for  appropriate  discussion  by the  Board  and  the
formulation  of  an  appropriate  response.  Shareholders  may  forward  written
communications  to the  Board  by  addressing  such  comments  to the  Board  of
Directors  of  Salisbury  Bancorp,  Inc.,  5  Bissell  Street,  P. O. Box  1868,
Lakeville, Connecticut 06039.

Audit Committee Report
----------------------

         The Audit  Committee has reviewed and  discussed the Company's  audited
financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006 with management
and has  discussed  the matters that are required to be discussed by SAS 61 with
Shatswell,   MacLeod  &  Company,  P.C.  (the  Company's  independent  auditors)
("Shatswell").

         The Audit Committee has received the written disclosures and the letter
from Shatswell  required by Independence  Standards Board Standard No. 1 and has
discussed Shatswell's independence with respect to the Company with Shatswell.

         Based on the  review  and  discussions  referred  to  above,  the Audit
Committee  recommended  to the Board that the audited  financial  statements  be
included in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2006 for filing with the SEC.

Salisbury Bancorp, Inc. Audit Committee

Michael A. Varet, Chairman
Louis E. Allyn, II
Louise F. Brown
Nancy F. Humphreys
Holly J. Nelson

         The foregoing  Report of the Company's  Audit  Committee is provided in
accordance with the rules and regulations of the SEC. Pursuant to such rules and
regulations,  this Report shall not be deemed "soliciting  material," filed with
the  SEC,  subject  to  Regulation  14A  and 14C of the  SEC or  subject  to the
liabilities of Section 18 of the Exchange Act.


                                       12


Human Resources and Compensation Committee Report
-------------------------------------------------

         The  Compensation  Committee has reviewed and discussed with management
the  Company's  Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis  section  of this  Proxy
Statement.  Based on such review and discussions,  the Committee has recommended
to the Board of  Directors  that the  Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis be
included in this Proxy Statement.  The  Compensation  Discussion and Analysis is
incorporated by reference into the Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended December 31, 2006.

Salisbury Bancorp, Inc. Human Resources and Compensation Committee

Holly J. Nelson, Chair
Louis E. Allyn, II
Nancy F. Humphreys
Michael A. Varet

         The foregoing  Report of the Company's Human Resources and Compensation
Committee is provided in accordance  with the rules and  regulations of the SEC.
Pursuant  to such  rules  and  regulations,  this  Report  shall  not be  deemed
"soliciting  material," filed with the SEC, subject to Regulation 14A and 14C of
the SEC or subject to the liabilities of Section 18 of the Exchange Act.

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Compensation Discussion and Analysis
------------------------------------

Introduction

         The Human Resources and  Compensation  Committee of the Company's Board
of  Directors  (the  "Compensation   Committee")  makes  decisions  relating  to
components of compensation for the Company's executive  officers,  including the
Chief Executive Officer, the President and Chief Operating Officer and the Chief
Financial   Officer  (the  "Named  Executive   Officers").   The  components  of
compensation include:

     o   base salary
     o   annual cash incentive bonuses
     o   post employment compensation
     o   other benefits

Compensation Philosophy

         The Compensation Committee makes decisions and recommendations relating
to Company  compensation,  consistent  with the intent to use  compensation as a
tool to recruit,  retain and reward top talent that is essential to the ultimate
success of the Company. The Compensation Committee has conducted a comprehensive
review of executive  compensation  programs to evaluate whether its programs are
aligned with the elements of its compensation  philosophy and strategy,  as well
as with the  interests  of  shareholders.  Such review  included a review of the
external market environment for

                                       13


executive  compensation.  In recent years Clark  Consulting  has  provided  this
external annual analysis of banking industry executive compensation  comparisons
to the Compensation Committee.  Clark Consulting compiles executive compensation
data of nearly  2,100  bank  clients  across  the  nation.  In  addition,  Clark
Consulting  has  built  a data  base  with  information  from  professionals  in
Massachusetts,  Rhode Island,  Connecticut  and New York that includes 181 banks
and financial  institutions.  They have provided human resource and compensation
strategy   management  to  region  banks  since  1969.  The  analysis   provides
comprehensive  data  needed  to  assess  the  competitiveness  of the  Company's
compensation  plan,  as  well as  information  needed  to  evaluate  the  plan's
effectiveness.

         When making compensation  decisions,  the Compensation  Committee takes
many factors into account,  including the Named Executive Officer's performance,
tenure and experience,  the performance of the Company  overall,  as well as the
historical  compensation of executive  officers.  In addition,  the Compensation
Committee   considers  the  performance  of  the  Company  and  the  executive's
contribution to that performance.  All decisions relating to the Named Executive
Officer's  compensation  are made by the  Compensation  Committee  in  executive
session, without management present. The Committee then makes recommendations to
the Board for final approval.

         The  Company,  with the review of the  Compensation  Committee,  offers
various types of compensation  for its Named Executive  Officers.  The Committee
offers  various types of  compensation  to achieve and balance  various  Company
goals and remain  competitive with other financial  institutions.  The Company's
goals include recruiting,  and retaining highly talented  employees,  motivating
those  employees to achieve  improved  results,  and connecting  Named Executive
Officers interests with the Company's shareholders' interests in order to induce
long term commitment to the Company through the provision of financial  security
in retirement and in the event of a change in control of the Company.

Current Compensation

Base Salary - The Company provides a significant portion of compensation through
an annual salary which is reviewed annually by the Compensation  Committee.  The
Compensation Committee believes that providing competitive base salary levels is
important in recruiting and retaining top talent, as the salary levels are often
the initial point of consideration in a compensation  package.  The Compensation
Committee  also  believes  salary is  important  to provide any Named  Executive
Officers with a steady and  predictable  source of income for them and for their
families'  basic living  needs.  In setting the salaries of the Named  Executive
Officers for 2006 and 2007, the  Compensation  Committee  reviewed the Company's
financial  performance  as  measured  by  earnings,  asset  growth,  and overall
financial soundness. Additional considerations were the Named Executive Officers
individual's performance,  responsibilities,  continued involvement in community
affairs,  length of  service  to the  Company as well as  external  market  data
relating  to  executive  compensation  of  comparable  institutions.  The  Named
Executive  Officers  received merit  increases  ranging from .5% to 3.5% for the
year 2007. After reviewing  external market  compensation  data the Compensation
Committee granted market adjustments to the base salaries of the Named Executive
Officers ranging from 1.5% to 3.8%.

Cash  Incentive  Bonus - The  Compensation  Committee  considers it important to
offer financial incentives to achieve Company performance goals. These financial
incentives are  discretionary  and are generally  granted based on the extent to
which the Company achieves annual  performance  objectives as established by the
Board of Directors.  Bonuses are generally accrued  throughout the year and paid
early

                                       14


in the  next  year.  The  Company  does not  have a plan in  place  that  grants
long-term  equity awards to Named  Executive  Officers.  In connection  with the
annual  incentive  compensation,  the  Compensation  Committee set the incentive
compensation  for the Named  Executive  Officers as a percentage of base salary.
For the year 2006,  the cash incentive  bonuses  earned for the Named  Executive
Officers were as follows:

           John F. Perotti                    10%               $20,892
           Richard J. Cantele, Jr.            11%               $15,924
           John F. Foley                       9%               $ 9,047

Post-Employment Compensation

Retirement  Plans - The  Company has a package of  post-employment  compensation
plans in place that  include  Company-only  funded  benefits as well as employee
contribution  benefits. The combination of plans allows the Company to offer its
employees, including the Named Executive Officers,  post-employment compensation
as incentive  to remain with the  Company.  The  Company's  decisions  regarding
post-employment  compensation  reflect  external  market  comparisons  to ensure
alignment  of  plans  with  the  broader   market.   The  Company   maintains  a
non-contributory  tax qualified  Defined  Benefit  Pension Plan, a  Supplemental
Retirement  Agreement  for the  Company's  CEO, a 401(k)  Retirement  Plan and a
Change in Control Plan.

Defined  Benefit  Pension Plan - The Bank maintains a  non-contributory  defined
benefit  pension plan for officers and other salaried  employees of the Bank who
become  participants  after  attaining  age 21 and  completing  one (1)  year of
service,  and were  hired  prior to October  1,  2006.  The plan was  adopted in
January 1953. The Named Executive Officers are participants in this plan.

         Pension  benefits  are based upon the annual  average of an  employee's
total  compensation for the five (5) consecutive plan years of employment during
which the  employee's  compensation  was the greatest and during which he or she
was a  participant.  The  amount of the annual  benefit is 2% of average  salary
offset  by .65% of the  social  security  wage  base per year of  service  (to a
maximum of 25 years)  plus  one-half  of 1% of  average  salary for each year of
service over 25 years (to a maximum of ten years).  This benefit  formula may be
modified to conform to the pension laws.  Internal  Revenue Code Section  401(a)
(17) limits  earnings used to calculate  qualified plan benefits to $220,000 for
2006.

         In  September  of 2006,  a  "soft-freeze"  was approved by the Board of
Directors  eliminating new  participation in the Plan. All employees hired on or
after October 1, 2006 are excluded  from  participation  in the Defined  Benefit
Pension Plan.  Eligible  employees  hired prior to October 1, 2006 will continue
receiving the benefit as outlined in the Plan.

Supplemental  Retirement  Agreement - John F.  Perotti,  Chairman and CEO, has a
supplemental  retirement  arrangement  that  has  been  in  effect  since  1994.
Following  his  disability  or  retirement,  Mr.  Perotti will  receive  monthly
payments of $1,250  (adjusted  annually to reflect the lesser of a five  percent
(5%)  increase or "The  Monthly  Consumer  Price Index for All Urban  Consumers,
United  States  City  Average,  All  Items"  published  by the  Bureau  of Labor
Statistics)  for a  period  of  ten  (10)  years.  The  supplemental  retirement
agreement includes  provisions that would prevent Mr. Perotti from working for a
competitor in the proximity of the Bank.

                                       15


401(k)  Plan - The Bank  offers a 401(k)  profit  sharing  plan to all  salaried
employees.  The Named Executive Officers  participate in this plan. The plan was
adopted  in 2000.  Each plan  year,  the Bank will  announce  the  amount of the
matching contributions, if any. Any match will be approved and authorized by the
Board of Directors,  only after an audit of year-end financials is complete. The
amount of the  matching  contributions  is  directly  related to the  employees'
401(k)  salary  deferral  contribution.  For the plan year that began January 1,
2006, all eligible  participants received a matching contribution equal to fifty
percent (50%) of the first four percent (4%) of the employees'  salary deferral.
All  contributions  to the plan  must pass  various  discrimination  tests.  The
amounts of contributions  approved by the Compensation Committee and paid to the
Named Executive Officers in 2006 are shown in the other  compensation  column of
the Summary  Compensation  Table. The Bank's match of contributions for the year
2006 and paid in February  2007 totaled  $92,979.  The amounts of  contributions
paid to the Named Executive  Officers are as follows:  Mr. Perotti,  $5,027; Mr.
Cantele, $3,544; and Mr. Foley, $2,282.

         In September  of 2006, a  "soft-freeze"  was approved  eliminating  new
participation  in the Plan. All employees  hired on or after October 1, 2006 are
excluded  from  participation  in the Defined  Contribution  Plan with the fifty
percent  (50%) of the first  four  percent  (4%)  formula.  An  enhanced  401(k)
matching  formula  was  approved  for  eligible  participants  hired on or after
October 1, 2006 that equals a one-hundred  percent (100%) matching  contribution
of up-to the first six percent (6%) of the employees' salary deferral.  Eligible
employees hired prior to October 1, 2006 will continue  receiving the benefit as
outlined in the pre-October 1, 2006 Plan. Currently there are no Named Executive
Officers participating in this plan.

Change in Control Agreements - The Company has Change in Control Agreements with
the Named Executive Officers and certain other key officers.  The agreements are
not  employment  agreements  and do not  provide  any  assurances  of  continued
employment.  The  Company  recognizes  that  a  change  in  control  can  create
uncertainty  for its  employees  that  may  result  in loss  or  distraction  of
executives during a critical period.  As a result,  the Company adopted a Change
in Control  Agreement as a mechanism  to retain  executives  and their  critical
capabilities  to enhance and protect the best  interests  of the Company and its
shareholders  during a change in control  environment,  or threatened  change in
control.  The agreements  provide that if following a "change in control" of the
Company or Bank, any of the Named  Executive  Officers and other key officers is
terminated,  involuntarily reassigned more than fifty (50) miles from Lakeville,
Connecticut,  or  has  an  involuntary  reduction  in  compensation,  duties  or
responsibilities,  he or she will be entitled to a lump sum payment equal to his
or her twelve (12) month  compensation based upon the most recent aggregate base
salary paid to the Named Executive Officers and other key officers in the twelve
(12)  month  period  immediately  preceding  the date of change in  control  and
benefits  are  continued  for twelve  (12)  months.  In no event  shall any such
payments be made in an amount which would cause them to be deemed non-deductible
to the Bank by any reason of operation  of Section 280G of the Internal  Revenue
Code.

Bank Owned Life Insurance (BOLI) - In 2004, the Bank purchased supplemental life
insurance  to  insure  the lives of  certain  officers  of the  Bank.  The Named
Executive  Officers  participate  in this  insurance  plan. By way of a separate
split-dollar  agreement,  the policy  interests are divided between the Bank and
the insured's  beneficiary.  The Bank owns the policy cash value, which includes
all accumulated policy earnings. A portion of the policy net death benefit, over
and above the cash value,  is assigned to the  insured's  beneficiary.  The plan
provides a tax free benefit to the  participant's  beneficiary  and provides the
Bank with a financing strategy that may generate  additional  earnings to offset
benefit plan expenses.

                                       16


Other  Benefits - Named  Executive  Officers  qualify for the same group health,
life, and dental insurance benefits as other full time employees of the Company.
The Compensation  Committee believes that these insurance benefits are generally
important  to  address  market  conditions  and  recruit  and  retain  qualified
employees.  In  addition,  the  Company  has in  place  a long  term  disability
insurance plan for the Named Executive Officers.  The amounts of these insurance
benefits for Mr.  Perotti  during 2006 are $17,304.  The amounts for Mr. Cantele
are $14,909. The amounts for Mr. Foley are $14,431.

COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         The  following  table  provides  certain   information   regarding  the
compensation  paid to the Named  Executive  Officers of the Company for services
rendered in all  capacities  during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006. All
compensation expense was paid by the Bank.



                                            Summary Compensation Table

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name and Principal    Year    Salary       Bonus     Stock     Option       Non-Equity      Change in      All Other      Total ($)
     Position                   ($)         ($)       Awards     Awards      Incentive       Pension      Compensation
                                                       ($)        ($)          Plan           Value           ($)
                                                                           Compensation        ($)
                                                                                ($)
        (a)           (b)       (c)         (d)        (e)        (f)           (g)          (h)(3)          (i)(4)          (j)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                             
John F. Perotti -    2006    $208,910   $40,000(1)                                          $94,300        $22,800       $386,902
Chairman and Chief                       20,892(2)
Executive Officer

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard J.           2006     144,768    30,000(1)                                           31,300         18,603        210,595
Cantele, Jr. -                           15,924(2)
President and
Chief Operating
Officer

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John F. Foley -      2006     100,839    12,063(1)                                           41,400         16,845        180,194
Chief Financial                           9,047(2)
Officer, Treasurer
& Secretary
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


         (1)      Column (d) - cash incentive  bonus earned in 2005 but was paid
                  in 2006.

         (2)      Column (d) - cash incentive  bonus earned in 2006 but was paid
                  in 2007.

         (3)      Column  (h)  -   assumptions   for  change  in  pension  value
                  (12/31/2005 & 12/31/2006 Fiscal Year End assumptions):

                  Discount rate: 6.00%

                  Mortality  table:   RP2000 Healthy  Annuitant  Table projected
                                      to 2015 - used for postretirement only; no
                                      preretirement   mortality  assumption  was
                                      included.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Contributions to Defined
                          Change in Pension Value         Contribution Plans
                        --------------------------------------------------------
                        Qualified    SERP    Total   Qualified     SERP    Total
                        ---------    ----    -----   ---------     ----    -----
        John F. Perotti   $94,300     $0    $94,300      $ --       $0       $0
Richard J. Cantele, Jr.    31,300      0     31,300        --        0        0
          John F. Foley    41,400      0     41,400        --        0        0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       17


(4) Column (i) - includes:  Mr. Perotti - $5,496 401 (k) matching  contributions
and  $17,304   insurance   premiums;   Mr.  Cantele  -  $3,692  401(k)  matching
contributions  and $14,911  insurance  premiums;  and Mr. Foley - $2,413  401(k)
matching contributions and $14,432 insurance premiums.
Agreements

         The  Company  has no  employment  agreements  with the Named  Executive
Officers.  However,  the Company has entered  into Change in Control  Agreements
with each Named Executive Officer,  which become effective upon the consummation
of a change in  control  of the  Company at which  point the  Agreements  have a
twelve  (12) month  term.  More  information  regarding  such  Change in Control
Agreements,  as well as other  post-employment  compensation  arrangements,  are
provided below under "Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control."



                                       Pension Benefits Table

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Name                   Plan Name            Number of       Present      Payments
                                                    Years Credited    Value of     During Last
                                                        Service      Accumulated   Fiscal Year
                                                          (#)          Benefit         ($)
                                                                         ($)

           (a)                        (b)                 (c)           (d)(1)         (e)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          
John F. Perotti          Salisbury Bank & Trust           34          $813,200         $0
                         Company Employees' Defined
                         Benefit Pension Plan

                         ---------------------------------------------------------------------

Richard J. Cantele, Jr.  Salisbury Bank & Trust           26           263,000          0
                         Company Employees' Defined
                         Benefit Pension Plan

                         ---------------------------------------------------------------------

John F. Foley            Salisbury Bank & Trust           25           275,200          0
                         Company Employees' Defined
                         Benefit Pension Plan

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


(1)      Column  (d)  -  assumptions   for  calculating  the  Present  Value  of
         Accumulated Benefit:

         Discount rate: 6.00%

         Mortality table:  RP2000  Healthy  Annuitant  Table projected to 2015 -
                           used  for   postretirement   only;  no  preretirement
                           mortality assumption was included.

Defined  Benefit  Pension Plan - The Bank maintains a  non-contributory  defined
benefit  pension plan for officers and other salaried  employees of the Bank who
become  participants  after  attaining  age 21 and  completing  one (1)  year of
service,  and were hired prior to October 1, 2006. The Named Executive  Officers
are participants in this plan.

                                       18


         Pension  benefits  are based upon the annual  average of an  employee's
total  compensation for the five (5) consecutive plan years of employment during
which the  employee's  compensation  was the greatest and during which he or she
was a  participant.  The  amount of the annual  benefit is 2% of average  salary
offset  by .65% of the  social  security  wage  base per year of  service  (to a
maximum of 25 years)  plus  one-half  of 1% of  average  salary for each year of
service over 25 years (to a maximum of ten years).  This benefit  formula may be
modified to conform to the pension laws.  Internal  Revenue Code Section  401(a)
(17) limits  earnings used to calculate  qualified plan benefits to $220,000 for
2006.

         In  September  of 2006,  a  "soft-freeze"  was approved by the Board of
Directors  eliminating new  participation in the Plan. All employees hired on or
after October 1, 2006 are excluded  from  participation  in the Defined  Benefit
Pension Plan.  Eligible  employees  hired prior to October 1, 2006 will continue
receiving the benefit as outlined in the Plan.

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control

         Pursuant  to the Change in Control  Agreements  between the Company and
each of the Named  Executive  Officers,  each  executive  is eligible to receive
payments and other benefits,  subject to certain conditions  described below, in
the event the executive is terminated,  involuntarily reassigned more than fifty
(50)  miles for  Lakeville,  Connecticut,  or has an  involuntary  reduction  in
compensation,  duties or  responsibilities  during the twelve (12) month  period
following a change in control.

         For  purposes  of the  Agreements,  a  "Change  in  Control"  means the
occurrence of one or more of the following events:

         a. any  "person"  (as such term is used in Section 13 (d) and 14(d) (2)
of the  Exchange  Act becomes a  "beneficial  owner" (as such term is defined in
Rule 13d-3  promulgated  under the Exchange  Act) (other than the  Company,  any
trustee or other fiduciary holding  securities under an employee benefit plan of
the  Company  or  any  corporation  owned,   directly  or  indirectly,   by  the
stockholders  of the Company,  in  substantially  the same  proportions as their
ownership of stock of the Company), directly or indirectly, of securities of the
Company or the Bank  representing  fifty  percent  (50%) or more of the combined
voting power of the then outstanding securities of the Company or the Bank; or

         b persons,  who as of the  Effective  Date,  constituted  the Company's
Board of  Directors  (the  "Incumbent  Board")  cease for any reason  including,
without  limitation,  as a result of a tender offer,  proxy  contest,  merger or
similar transaction, to constitute at least a majority of the Company's Board of
Directors,  provided  that  any  person  becoming  a  director  of  the  Company
subsequent  to the  Effective  Date whose  election  was  approved by at least a
majority of the directors then comprising the Incumbent Board shall for purposes
of this Section 2(b), be considered a member of the Incumbent Board; or

         c. the Board of  Directors  of the  Company  for  reasons  other than a
substantial  decline in the  earnings  and/or stock price or multiple or similar
indications of economic or financial  duress,  approve a merger or consolidation
of  Salisbury  Bancorp,  Inc.  or the Bank with any other  corporation  of other
entity,  other than a merger or  consolidation  which would result in the voting
securities of the Company  outstanding  immediately prior thereto  continuing to
represent  (either by remaining  outstanding  or by being  converted into voting
securities  of the  surviving  entity)  more  than  fifty  percent  (50%) of the
combined voting power of the voting  securities of the Company or such surviving
entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation; or

                                       19


         d. the Board of Directors approve a plan of complete liquidation of the
Company or the Bank or an agreement for the sale or  disposition  by the Company
of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company or the Bank.

         The  circumstances in which and the estimated amounts to be paid to the
Named Executive Officers under the Agreements are as follows:

         a. If,  the  Executive's  employment  with the  Bank  terminates  or is
reassigned, (except for removal by an agency acting with proper jurisdiction, or
by a board of  directors  for  cause  or as a result  of  death,  retirement  or
disability)  then  the Bank  and/or  its  successor  shall  continue  to pay the
Executive in accordance with the Bank's then existing  payroll  policies for the
balance of the twelve  (12) month  period  following  the change in control at a
rate equal to the  Executive's  annual  compensation  based upon the most recent
aggregate  base salary  paid to the  Executive  in the twelve (12) month  period
immediately preceding his or her termination or reassignment;

         b. In the event the  Executive  should  obtain other  employment  or be
compensated for services rendered to any depository or lending institution, then
any payments provided for in the agreements shall be reduced by any compensation
earned by the Executive as the result of employment or consulting after the Date
of Termination or Reassignment.

         c.  It is the  intention  of the  parties  to the  Agreements  that  no
payments  by the Bank to or for the  Executive's  benefit  under the  Agreements
shall be  non-deductible  to the Bank by reason of the operation of Section 280G
of the Internal Revenue Code. Accordingly, if by reason of the operation of said
Section 280G of the Internal  Revenue Code, any such payments  exceed the amount
that can be deducted by the Bank,  the amount of such payments  shall be reduced
to the maximum that can be deducted by the Bank.  To the extent that payments in
excess of the amount  that can be deducted by the Bank have been made to and for
the Executive's benefit,  they shall be refunded with interest at the applicable
rate  provided  under Section  1274(d) of the Internal  Revenue Code, or at such
other  rate as may be  required  in  order  that no such  payment  to or for the
Executive's  benefit  shall be  non-deductible  pursuant to Section  280G of the
Internal  Revenue  Code.  Any payments  made under the  agreements  that are not
deductible by the Bank as result of losses that have been carried forward by the
Bank for Federal tax purposes, shall not be deemed a nondeductible amount.

         Assuming a December 31, 2006 termination  event, the aggregate value of
payments and benefits to which each Named Executive Officer would be entitled in
the event the executive terminates employment would be as follows:

           Name             Salary Payments and   Benefit and Health
                                   Bonus               Programs          Total
                                    ($)                   ($)             ($)
John F. Perotti                   $208,915              $27,508        $236,423
Richard J. Cantele, Jr.           $144,768              $16,230        $160,998
John F. Foley                     $100,526              $18,536        $119,062

         Additional  information regarding  Post-Employment  Compensation is set
forth  in the  Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis  portion  of  this  Proxy
Statement.

                                       20




                                            BOARD OF DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

                                             Director Compensation Table

                                                                                      Change in
                                                                                    Pension Value
                                                                                  and Nonqualified
                                                                     Non-Equity       Deferred
                               Fees Earned or    Stock     Option  Incentive Plan   Compensation      All Other
            Name                Paid in Cash     Awards    Awards   Compensation      Earnings       Compensation    Total
                             ($)(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)  ($)(6)     ($)          ($)             ($)             ($)          ($)
                                                                                               
Louise E. Allyn, II               $20,450        $4,560     $0           $0              $0               0         $25,010
John R. H. Blum                    43,350        4,560       0            0               0               0          47,910
Louise F. Brown                    20,100        4,560       0            0               0               0          24,660
Richard J. Cantele, Jr.                 0            0       0            0               0               0               0
Robert S. Drucker                  21,150        4,560       0            0               0               0          25,710
Nancy F. Humphreys                 23,250        4,560       0            0               0               0          27,810
Holly J. Nelson                    21,700        4,560       0            0               0               0          26,260
John F. Perotti                         0            0       0            0               0               0               0
Michael A. Varet                   21,600        4,560       0            0               0               0          26,160



---------------
     (1)  All directors' fees are paid in cash.
     (2)  As officers of the  Company  and Bank,  Directors  Cantele and Perotti
          received no compensation.
     (3)  Includes  $25,000 paid to Director  Blum for his services as Presiding
          Director.
     (4)  Includes   $3,000  paid  to  Director   Nelson  for  her  services  as
          Chairperson of the Human Resources and Compensation Committee.
     (5)  Includes $5,000 paid to Director Varet for his services as Chairman of
          the Audit Committee.
     (6)  Represents  120 shares of the  Company's  common  stock on May 9, 2006
          valued at $38.00 per share.

Directors' Fees
---------------

         During 2006, each Director  received an annual  retainer of $4,000.  In
addition,  Directors  received $500 for each Board of Directors meeting attended
and $350 for each  committee  meeting  attended.  Directors  Cantele and Perotti
received no additional compensation for their service as Directors or members of
any Board committee during 2006.

Directors' Stock Retainer Plan
------------------------------

         The  shareholders  of the Company voted to approve the Directors  Stock
Retainer Plan of Salisbury Bancorp, Inc. (the "Plan") at the 2001 Annual Meeting
of Shareholders.  The Plan provides  non-employee  Directors of the Company with
shares of Common  Stock as a component  of their  compensation  for  services as
non-employee directors. The maximum number of shares of Common Stock that may be
issued  pursuant  to the  Plan is  15,000.  Each  year a grant  under  the  Plan
consisting  of 120 shares of Common  Stock for each  non-employee  Director  who
served for twelve  months and a prorated  number of shares to reflect the number
of months served for any new non-employee  Director. On May 10, 2006, 840 shares
were  issued  pursuant  to the Plan.  The next  grant  date  under the Plan will
immediately  precede the Annual Meeting which is to be held on May 16, 2007, and
will be in the amount of 120 shares per director.  All such  issuances  shall be
exempt from  registration  under the Securities Act of 1934, as amended pursuant
to Section  3(a)(2) and Section  4(2),  as they are  transactions  by a bank not
involving any public offering.

                                       21


Certain Relationships and Related Transactions
----------------------------------------------

         The  Company  and the Bank have had,  and expect to have in the future,
transactions  in  the  ordinary  course  of  business  with  certain  Directors,
officers,  principal shareholders and their associates on substantially the same
terms as those available for comparable transactions with others.

Indebtedness of Management and Others
-------------------------------------

         Some of the  Directors  and  executive  officers of the Company and the
Bank, as well as firms and companies with which they are associated, are or have
been customers of the Bank, and as such, have had banking  transactions with the
Bank. As a matter of policy,  loans to Directors and executive officers are made
in the ordinary course of business on  substantially  the same terms,  including
interest rates,  collateral and repayment terms, as those prevailing at the time
for comparable  transactions with other persons and do not involve more than the
normal risk of collectibility or present other unfavorable features.

         Since  January 1, 2006,  the highest  aggregate  outstanding  principal
amount of all loans  extended by the Bank to its Directors,  executive  officers
and all associates of such persons as a group was  $1,658,450,  representing  an
aggregate  principal amount equal to 3.74% of the equity capital accounts of the
Bank.

Policies and Procedures for the Review, Approval or Ratification of Transactions
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
with Related Persons
--------------------

         Pursuant  to the  Company's  written  Code of Ethics and  Conflicts  of
Interest Policy, all business dealings and transactions  between the Company and
its officers,  directors,  principal shareholders and employees or their related
interests,  must be conducted in an arm's-length fashion. Any consideration paid
or  received  by the  Company in such a  transaction  must be on terms and under
circumstances  that  are  substantially  the  same  or  as  favorable  as  those
prevailing at the time for comparable  business dealings with unaffiliated third
parties.  Related  parties of the  Company  must fully  disclose to the Board of
Directors any personal interest they have in matters affecting the Company.

             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

         Section  16(a) of the Exchange Act  requires  the  Company's  executive
officers, Directors and other persons who own more than ten percent (10%) of the
Company's  Common Stock to file with the SEC reports of ownership and changes in
ownership of the Company's Common Stock.  Executive officers,  Directors and any
shareholders owning greater than ten percent (10%) of the Company's Common Stock
are required by the SEC's  regulations to furnish the Company with copies of all
such reports that they file.

         Based solely on a review of copies of reports  filed with the SEC since
January 1, 2006 and of written representations by certain executive officers and
Directors,  all persons  subject to the reporting  requirements of Section 16(a)
are believed by management to have filed the required  reports on a timely basis
except as  follows:  Mr.  Blum  failed to timely  file one Form 4 to report  the
disposition of shares from his IRA.

                                       22


                                   PROPOSAL 2

                         RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT
                             OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

         Shareholders  are asked to  consider  and  ratify  the  appointment  of
Shatswell,  MacLeod & Company,  P.C.  ("Shatswell")  as independent  auditors to
audit the consolidated  financial  statements of the Company for the fiscal year
ending  December 31, 2007.  If  shareholders  do not ratify the  appointment  of
Shatswell,  the  Audit  Committee  will  consider  the vote of  shareholders  in
selecting the  independent  auditors in the future.  Shatswell has served as the
independent  auditors  for the Company for the fiscal  year ended  December  31,
2006. A  Representative  of Shatswell is expected to attend the Annual  Meeting,
and he or she will be provided an  opportunity  to make a statement if he or she
desires to do so and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

1.       Audit Fees
         ----------

         The aggregate fees billed for  professional  services  rendered for the
audit of the Company's annual  financial  statements for the last two (2) fiscal
years and the reviews of the financial statements included in the Company's Form
10-Q for the quarters of the fiscal  years ended  December 31, 2006 and December
31, 2005 were $116,937 and $115,145, respectively.

2.       Audit-Related Fees
         ------------------

         The aggregate fees billed for services rendered in each of the last two
(2) years for assurance and related  services by Shatswell  that are  reasonably
related to regulatory audit requirements of the Trust Department were $6,000 for
the fiscal  year ended  December  31,  2006 and $5,925 for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2005.

3.       Tax Fees
         --------

         The  aggregate  fees  billed  in each of the  last  two (2)  years  for
professional  services  rendered by Shatswell for tax preparation for the fiscal
years ended  December  31, 2006 and  December  31, 2005 were $9,169 and $15,026,
respectively.

4.       All Other Fees
         --------------

         There were no aggregate fees billed for services rendered by Shatswell,
other than the services  covered above,  for the fiscal years ended December 31,
2006 and December 31, 2005.

Independence

         The  Audit  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  of the  Company  has
considered and determined  that the provision of services  rendered by Shatswell
relating  to  matters 2  through  4 above is  compatible  with  maintaining  the
independence of such auditors.

Audit  Committee  Pre-Approval of Audit and  Permissible  Non-Audit  Services of
Independent Auditors

         The Audit Committee's  policy is to pre-approve all audit and non-audit
services provided by the independent auditors, other than those listed under the
de minimus exception.  These services may include audit services,  audit-related
services,  tax services  and other  services.  Pre-approval  is detailed as to a
particular  service or  category  of  services,  and is  generally  subject to a
specific budget. The Audit Committee has delegated pre-approval authority to its
Chairman when  expeditious  delivery of services is necessary.  The  independent
auditors  and  management  are  required  to report to the full Audit

                                       23


Committee  regarding the extent of services provided by independent  auditors in
accordance with this  pre-approval,  and the fees for the services  performed to
date.

         THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR" THE  RATIFICATION  OF
PROPOSAL 2. PROXIES  SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS WILL BE SO VOTED UNLESS
SHAREHOLDERS SPECIFY A CONTRARY CHOICE ON THE PROXY CARD. THE PROPOSAL TO RATIFY
THE  APPOINTMENT OF SHATSWELL,  MACLEOD & COMPANY,  P.C. WILL BE APPROVED IF THE
AFFIRMATIVE VOTES CAST EXCEED THE VOTES CAST OPPOSING THE PROPOSAL.

                                   PROPOSAL 3

                                 OTHER BUSINESS

         The Company is not aware of any business to be acted upon at the Annual
Meeting other than that which is discussed in this Proxy Statement. In the event
that  any  other  business  requiring  a vote of the  Shareholders  is  properly
presented  at the  meeting,  the holders of the proxies will vote your shares in
accordance with their best judgment and the recommendations of a majority of the
Board of Directors.

         You are  encouraged  to  exercise  your  right to vote by  marking  the
appropriate boxes and dating and signing the enclosed proxy card. The proxy card
may be  returned  in the  enclosed  envelope,  postage-prepaid  if mailed in the
United  States.  In the event  that you are  later  able to  attend  the  Annual
Meeting,  you may  revoke  your proxy and vote your  shares in person.  A prompt
response will be helpful and your cooperation is appreciated.

         A copy of the 2006 Annual Report to  Shareholders,  which  includes the
consolidated financial statements of the Company for the year ended December 31,
2006, is being mailed with this proxy statement to all shareholders  entitled to
vote at the Annual Meeting on or about April 16, 2007.

                DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

         Any proposal that a Company  shareholder wishes to have included in the
Company's  Proxy  Statement  and form of Proxy  relating to the  Company's  2008
Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  under Rule 14a-8 of the SEC must be received by
the Company's Secretary at 5 Bissell Street, Lakeville, CT 06039 by December 10,
2007.  Nothing  in this  paragraph  shall be deemed to  require  the  Company to
include  in its  Proxy  Statement  and  form  of  Proxy  for  such  meeting  any
shareholder  proposal which does not meet the  requirements of the SEC in effect
at the time. In addition,  under the Company's Bylaws,  shareholders who wish to
nominate a director or bring other business before an annual meeting must comply
with the following:

         o  You must be a  shareholder  of record and must have given  notice in
            writing to the  Secretary  of the  Company  (a) not less than twenty
            (20) days nor more than one hundred  thirty  (130) days prior to the
            meeting  with  respect  to  matters  other  than the  nomination  of
            directors and (b) not less than thirty (30) days nor more than fifty
            (50) days prior to the meeting  with  respect to the  nomination  of
            directors.

         o  Your  notice  must  contain  specific  information  required  in the
            Company's Bylaws.

                                       24




                                              SHAREHOLDER INFORMATION

         The Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December
31,  2006 is  filed  with  the SEC and may be  obtained  without  charge  by any
shareholder upon written request to:

          John F. Foley, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer & Secretary
                             Salisbury Bancorp, Inc.
                            P. O. Box 1868 Lakeville,
                             Connecticut 06039-1868

         The Company's 2006 Annual Report  accompanies  this document and is not
incorporated by reference.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

                                              /s/ John F. Foley
                                              ----------------------------------
                                              John F. Foley
                                              Secretary

Lakeville, Connecticut
April 16, 2007

                                       25



Appendix A
                                                                   July 31, 2006

                             SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER
                             -----------------------

Organization

There shall be a committee of the Board of Directors of Salisbury Bancorp,  Inc.
(the  "Corporation")  to be known as the Audit  Committee.  Such Committee shall
serve as the Audit Committee for the Corporation and its subsidiaries. The Audit
Committee shall be composed of at least three (3) directors.

All Audit Committee members shall be "independent  directors" within the meaning
of Section 121A of the American Stock Exchange  Company Guide ("Amex Rules") and
Rule 10A-3 under the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended  (the "1934
Act"),  including but not limited to that no member of the Audit  Committee may,
other than in his or her capacity as a member of the Audit Committee,  the Board
of Directors,  or any other Board  committee,  accept directly or indirectly any
consulting,  advisory,  or other compensatory fee from the Corporation or any of
its  subsidiaries or be an "affiliated  person" of the Corporation or any of its
subsidiaries.

All members of the Audit  Committee  shall at the time of their  appointment  be
able to read  and  understand  fundamental  financial  statements,  including  a
company's balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement. At least one
member of the Audit  Committee shall be  "financially  sophisticated,"  that is,
have  employment  experience in finance or  accounting,  requisite  professional
certification in accounting,  or other comparable experience or background which
results in the individual's financial sophistication,  including but not limited
to being or having been a chief executive  officer,  chief financial  officer or
other senior officer with financial oversight responsibilities.

In  addition,  at least  one  member  of the  Audit  Committee  may be an "Audit
Committee Financial Expert" as defined in Item 401(h)(2) of Regulation S-K under
the rules and  regulations of the  Securities and Exchange  Commission to mean a
person who has the following attributes acquired in the manner specified in Item
401(h)(3):  (i) an understanding of generally accepted accounting principles and
financial statements; (ii) the ability to assess the general application of such
principles  in  connection  with the  accounting  for  estimates,  accruals  and
reserves;  (iii)  experience  preparing,   auditing,   analyzing  or  evaluating
financial  statements  that  present  a  breadth  and  level  of  complexity  of
accounting issues that are generally comparable to the breadth and complexity of
issues  that  can  reasonably  be  expected  to be  raised  by the  registrant's
financial  statements,  or experience  actively  supervising one or more persons
engaged in such  activities;  (iv) an  understanding  of internal  controls  and
procedures for financial reporting;  and (v) an understanding of audit committee
functions.  In compliance  with Item 401(h)(1),  the  Corporation  will disclose
whether it has any Audit Committee Financial Experts, and if so, the names(s) of
such  person(s)  and whether they are  independent  under the AMEX  standard for
audit committee  independence.  If at least one member is not an Audit Committee
Financial  Expert,  the  Corporation  will  disclose why it does not consider it
necessary to have an Audit Committee Financial Expert.

                                       26



Statement of Policy

The Audit  Committee  shall  provide  assistance  to the Board of  Directors  in
fulfilling its responsibility to the shareholders,  potential shareholders,  and
investment  community relating to corporate  accounting,  reporting practices of
the Corporation,  and the quality and integrity of the financial  reports of the
Corporation.  In so doing,  it is the  responsibility  of the Audit Committee to
maintain  free and open  means  of  communication  between  the  directors,  the
independent auditors, the internal auditors, and the financial management of the
Corporation.

Responsibilities

In carrying out its responsibilities,  the Audit Committee believes its policies
and  procedures  should  remain  flexible  in  order to best  react to  changing
conditions  and to ensure to the directors and  shareholders  that the corporate
accounting and reporting practices of the Corporation are in accordance with all
requirements and are of the highest quality.

The Audit  Committee  in its  capacity as a committee  of the Board of Directors
shall be directly responsible for the appointment, compensation and oversight of
the work of any  registered  public  accounting  firm  employed  by the  Company
(including  resolution  of  disagreements  between  management  and the  auditor
regarding financial  reporting) for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit
report or related work, and each such  accounting  firm shall report directly to
the Audit Committee.

The Audit  Committee  is  responsible  for ensuring its receipt from the outside
auditor a formal  written  statement  detailing  all  relationships  between the
auditor and the Corporation and its subsidiaries and affiliates  consistent with
Independence  Standards Board Standard Number 1,  Independence  Discussions with
Audit Committees (January 1999).

The Audit  Committee  shall be responsible  for actively  engaging in a dialogue
with  respect to any  disclosed  relationships  or services  that may impact the
objectivity and independence of the auditor and for taking or recommending  that
the full  board  take  appropriate  action to oversee  the  independence  of the
outside auditor.

The Audit  Committee  shall meet with the  independent  auditors  and  financial
management of the  Corporation to review the scope of the proposed audit for the
current  year and the audit  procedures  to be utilized,  and at the  conclusion
thereof  review such audit,  including  any comments or  recommendations  of the
independent auditors.

The  Audit   Committee  shall  review  with  the   independent   auditors,   the
Corporation's internal auditor(s),  and financial and accounting personnel,  the
adequacy and  effectiveness  of the  accounting  and  financial  controls of the
Corporation, and elicit any recommendations for the improvement of such internal
control  procedures or particular  areas where new or more detailed  controls or
procedures are desirable. Particular emphasis should be given to the adequacy of
such internal controls to expose any payments,  transactions, or procedures that
might  be  deemed  illegal  or  otherwise  improper.   Further,   the  Committee
periodically   should  review  company  policy  statements  to  determine  their
adherence to the code of conduct.

The Audit  Committee shall review the internal audit function of the Corporation
including  the  independence  and authority of its  reporting  obligations,  the
proposed  audit plans for the coming year,  and the  coordination  of such plans
with the independent auditors.

The Audit Committee shall review  summaries of findings from completed  internal
audits  and  progress  reports  on  the  proposed   internal  audit  plan,  with
explanations for any deviations from the original plan.

                                       27


The Audit  Committee  shall  review the  financial  statements  contained in the
annual report to shareholders  with  management and the independent  auditors to
determine  that the  independent  auditors are satisfied with the disclosure and
content of the financial statements to be presented to the shareholders.

The Audit Committee shall review and discuss with management and the independent
auditors any changes in accounting principles.

The Audit  Committee shall provide  sufficient  opportunity for the internal and
independent  auditors  to meet with the members of the audit  committee  without
members of management present. Among the items to be discussed in these meetings
are  the  independent  auditors'  evaluation  of  the  Corporation's  financial,
accounting,  and auditing  personnel,  and the cooperation  that the independent
auditors received during the course of the audit.

All auditing services and non-audit services, other than those which are subject
to the de  minimus  exception  of the  applicable  rules of the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission"),  which  an  auditor  provides  to the
Corporation  shall be  authorized  and  pre-approved  in  advance  by the  Audit
Committee. The Audit Committee must document all non-audit services performed by
the auditor  which the Audit  Committee  pre-approves.  The Audit  Committee may
delegate  to one or more of its  members the  authority  to grant such  required
pre-approvals.  The  decisions  of any member to whom  authority is delegated to
pre-approve an activity  requiring  pre-approval  shall be presented to the full
Audit Committee at each of its meetings.

The Audit Committee shall review human resources and succession  planning within
the accounting, financial reporting and audit functions of the Corporation.

The Audit  Committee  shall  submit  the  minutes of all  meetings  of the Audit
Committee to, or discuss the matters  discussed at each committee  meeting with,
the Board of Directors.

The Audit Committee shall investigate any matter brought to its attention within
the scope of its duties,  with the power to engage independent counsel and other
advisors as it determines necessary to carry out is duties.

The Audit Committee  shall  determine the appropriate  funding to be provided by
the Corporation for payment of compensation to the registered  public accounting
firm employed by the  Corporation  for purposes of rendering an audit report and
to any advisors employed by the Audit Committee.

The Audit Committee  shall have the authority and funding to engage  independent
counsel  and any other  advisors  as the Audit  Committee  may  determine  to be
necessary to carry out its duties and responsibilities.

The Audit Committee shall receive, and act upon as appropriate,  the disclosures
made by the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial  Officer  concerning
internal controls and fraud required by Rule 13a-14 of the 1934 Act.

Reports of the Audit Committee

The Audit Committee  shall prepare a report suitable for appropriate  disclosure
as  may  be  required  in  the  Corporation's  annual  meeting  proxy  statement
concerning  the  Audit  Committee's   review  of  the  Corporation's   financial
statements and disclosing  whether the Audit Committee  recommended to the Board
of  Directors  that  the  audited  financial   statements  be  included  in  the
Corporation's  annual report and addressing such other issues as may be required
by the  Amex  Rules  or the  1934  Act,  or the  regulations  of the  Commission
promulgated  pursuant  thereto  including  Item 7(d)(3) of Regulation 14A of the
Commission.

                                       28


In addition,  the Audit  Committee  shall report to the Board of Directors which
will make  appropriate  disclosures  regarding  whether each member of the Audit
Committee is an  "independent  director",  whether  each member is  "financially
sophisticated"  and whether any member is an "Audit Committee  Financial Expert"
under Item 401(h) of Regulation S-K of the Commission.

Annual  Review  and  Appropriate  Disclosure  by the Board of  Directors  of the
Charter of the Audit Committee

The Board of  Directors  will  review the charter of the Audit  Committee  on an
annual basis and will cause the  Corporation to make  appropriate  disclosure of
and regarding same in accordance with applicable law.

Whistle-blower Procedures

The Audit Committee shall establish procedures for the receipt,  retention,  and
treatment  of  complaints  received  by the  Corporation  regarding  accounting,
internal  accounting  controls,   or  auditing  matters;  and  the  confidential
anonymous  submission  by employees  of the  Corporation  of concerns  regarding
questionable accounting or auditing matters.

                                       29

[X] PLEASE MARK VOTES            REVOCABLE PROXY
    AS IN THIS EXAMPLE       SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.

                      THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF
                THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.

     The undersigned  holder(s) of the Common Stock of Salisbury  Bancorp,  Inc.
(the  "Company") do hereby  nominate,  constitute and appoint Nancy F. Humphreys
and  Holly  J.  Nelson  jointly  and  severally,  proxies  with  full  power  of
substitution,  for us and in our name,  place  and stead to vote all the  Common
Stock of the Company, standing in our name on its books on March 23, 2007 at the
Annual  Meeting  of its  Shareholders  to be  held  at the  Interlaken  Inn,  74
Interlaken Road, Lakeville,  Connecticut on Wednesday, May 16, 2007 at 4:00 p.m.
or at any adjournment  thereof with all the power the undersigned  would possess
if personally present, as follows:


                                                                  With-  For All
                                                           For    hold   Except*
(1)  ELECT THE FOLLOWING  PERSONS  (Louis E. Allyn,  II,   [_]    [_]      [_]
     Robert S. Drucker, and Michael A. Varet, for three (3) year terms) TO SERVE
     AS DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY WHO ALONG WITH SIX DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS DO NOT
     EXPIRE AT THIS MEETING SHALL  CONSTITUTE THE FULL BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
     COMPANY.

*INSTRUCTION:  To withhold  authority to vote for any individual  nominee,  mark
"For All Except"and write that nominee's name in the space provided below.


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                                                           For  Against  Abstain
(2)  RATIFICATION  OF  THE  APPOINTMENT OF  INDEPENDENT    [_]    [_]      [_]
     AUDITORS:  Proposal to ratify the  appointment  of
     the   independent   public   accounting   firm  of
     Shatswell,   MacLeod  &  Company,   P.C.   as  the
     independent auditors of the Company for the fiscal
     year ending December 31, 2007.

(3)  OTHER BUSINESS:  To conduct whatever other business may properly be brought
     before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.  Management at present knows
     of no other  business to be presented by or on behalf of the Company or its
     Management at the meeting. In the event that any other business requiring a
     vote of the Shareholders is properly presented at the meeting,  the holders
     of the proxies will vote your shares in accordance with their best judgment
     and the recommendations of a majority of the Board of Directors.

PLEASE CHECK BOX IF YOU PLAN TO                                            [_]
ATTEND THE MEETING.

                                                        ------------------------
         Please be sure to sign and date                | Date                 |
           this Proxy in the box below.                 |                      |
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|                                                                              |
|                                                                              |
-----------Shareholder sign above----------Co-holder (if any) sign above--------

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  Detach above card, date, sign and mail in postage-prepaid envelope provided.

                             SALISBURY BANCORP, INC.
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     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" PROPOSALS (1) AND (2).

     THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SPECIFICATION INDICATED. IF
NO SPECIFICATION IS INDICATED,  THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" PROPOSALS (1) AND
(2).

     All  joint  owners  must  sign.   When   signing  as  attorney,   executor,
administrator,  trustee or  guardian,  please give full title.  If more than one
trustee, all must sign.

     THIS  PROXY MAY BE  REVOKED  AT ANY TIME  PRIOR TO THE  MEETING  BY WRITTEN
NOTICE TO THE COMPANY OR MAY BE WITHDRAWN  AND YOU MAY VOTE IN PERSON SHOULD YOU
ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING.

                               PLEASE ACT PROMPTLY
                     SIGN, DATE &MAIL YOUR PROXY CARD TODAY
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IF YOUR ADDRESS HAS CHANGED,  PLEASE  CORRECT THE ADDRESS IN THE SPACE  PROVIDED
BELOW AND RETURN THIS PORTION WITH THE PROXY IN THE ENVELOPE PROVIDED.

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