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Cyndy  > History > New Hampshire > Strawbery Banke (old spelling)
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Cyndy > Remember the Paul and Manning Wharves......these were the houses mentioned...
   House in the center was the Lt.Governor John Wentworth house, 1700's.
   house on left was the Bailey house, c.1840
  house on right was the Smart house
                 Strawbery Banke
Cyndy > Wooden warehouses along Puddle Dock once used for the West Indies trade, looking west, c.1870.
  the buildings in lower picture are of commerical and residential buildings along the west side of Puddle Dock
              Strawbery Banke
Cyndy > This board....the 2 pictures on the left are in the previous picture so will not repeat here.
   Map (bottom) on left shows where Puddle Dock this particular location was.
   Lower picture on bottom is showing Marcy Street.......by the 1900's the maritime business gave away to candy stores,  butcher shops, and groceries.  Brothels, oyster houses, and stables thrived on Marcy St. (upper right picture as well as the bottom picture).
                Strawbery Banke
Cyndy > Slavery in New Hampshire...........yes, in fact the Sherburn's
had slaves in 1745 as this estate inventory shows for Joseph Sherburne.
Cyndy > Upper left:  another view of Puddle Dock, late 1890's
  Middle left:  shows how the wharves were built.....cobb,crib,or other methods...here's is one example of Cobb method
  Lower left:  crib method 
  Upper right- 3 smaller pictures show excavations
  Lower right- view of Portsmouth,NH in 1934 or 1954 ( hard to
read numbers)
             Strawbery Banke
Cyndy > The bridge over the Piscataqua River can be seen in the background.
   The garden is at the edge of the water which was part of the
Puddle Dock .
Cyndy > (This photo is the same as # 4 which is much closer to see the pictures shown here)
   " the 19th century waterfront.  Strawbery Banke Museum built this 19th century whaf as it was represented on the J.G.Hale's
map of 1813.    in the 18th and 19th centuries, wharves lined both the north and south sides of the tidal inlet, seen today as an open grassy area.   Active commerce on the south side
included a manufacturer of spars and wooden pumps, a tanner,and an apple processing company.  There were several warehouses on the northern bank wharves.  One warehouse became the Mckee Boiler Co., and later converted into tenenment housing.   The Marden mast yard was located
immediately behind you."    (no photo of the building,sorry).
**picture on left--"landing of the falls" by Travis,1935
** picture on right--"evacuation by Roland Robbins",1966
**Script on the blue background--Sanborn's Fire Insurance Map of 1878
Cyndy > Same as # 3....close up of pictures
Cyndy > Early kitchen located in the "Abbott's store", dated 1919-1950......when I walked into that kitchen it brought back memories of my great grandmother's kitchen
Slavery in New Hampshire...........yes, in fact the Sherburn's
had slaves in 1745 as this estate inventory shows for Joseph Sherburne.
 > Slavery in New Hampshire...........yes, in fact the Sherburn's
had slaves in 1745 as this estate inventory shows for Joseph Sherburne.
Slavery in New Hampshire...........yes, in fact the Sherburn's
had slaves in 1745 as this estate inventory shows for Joseph Sherburne.
Camera: Eastman Kodak Company (Kodak Clas Digital Film Scanner / Hr200) |
More details: exif |
Original size: 1536px x 1024px |
Current: 400px x 267px |
Other sizes: Small · M · L · O · save photo |
filename: 006_4 |
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