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Seacoast New Hampshire
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MY EARS BURNING

HERALD GoSSIP LADY
reveals secrets about
my three current
books, both new &
in progress
READ ABOUT IT

 

RHYMING ROMNEY

Trivial points about
Romney  and poetry,
plus UFOs and 
archaeology on the
Isles of Shoals
CLICK HERE



 

KILL ALL VAMP WRITERS

HAVE YOU SEEN
THIS NOVELLA BY
A NEW HAMPSHIRE
WRITER?
KILL ALL
VAMPIRE WRITERS


 

DISCOVER PORTSMOUTH

Bet you didn't
know all this
about the
old city library. 
CLICK HERE




 

NO-WINTER FASHION

Victorian bathing suits
make the perfect cool
weather beathware for
global warming
CHECK IT OUT






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Home Arts Poetry Sing Frank Jones Brewery Song
See my brand new autographed gift book click here
Sing Frank Jones Brewery Song Print E-mail
Written by P Ryan   
SEE poem manuscript

How the Song Was Discovered

READ the song lyrics 

SeacoastNH.com received this rare original piece of ephemera from reader Mike O'Keefe of Washington, DC. Born in Portsmouth, NH, Mike graduated from the local high school in 1965 and taught history at nearby York High in Maine. When he first notified us of his discovery, Mike currently works at the refugee bureau of the Department of State in DC where he lives with his wife Ann. He has worked in Botswana, Costa Rica and other locations and was responsible for programs for two million refugees in the Sudan.

Mike's mother Mary of Portsmouth discovered the fragile manuscript in 1999 among the family papers. Mike's grandfather worked at the Frank Jones Brewery toward the end of the last century, as did many Irish immigrants. The O'Keefe family arrived in the Seacoast in the 1850s.

His great grand-uncle, Corneilus O'Keefe, owned a saloon on Market Square and represented a Portsmouth ward in the New Hampshire General Court during the 1890s. In a strange twist of fate, Mike too represented Portsmouth Ward 4 in the General Court of NH from 1972-80. Corneilus followed the typical Irish job immigrant progression, Mike says. First, he was a "sole sorter" at Gale Shoe Factory, then a barrel maker at the Jones Brewery, and finally worked at the Portsmouth Navy Yard. He was the only survivor of an accident at the Yard in the 1920s when a construction building he and several other men were on fell into a dry-dock.

. "I was so delighted to find SeacoastNH.com," Mike writes. "I have never seen a web site like it. You have done a great job. Whenever I feel homesick, I turn to your excellent web site and remember Portsmouth.

Copyright © 1999 SeacoastNH.com. All rights reserved. Updated 2008

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Monday, February 13, 2012 
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