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Seacoast New Hampshire
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LIVE UPDATE

Finally got my 2012
lecture list updated.
About a dozen more
appearances this
year as seen on
ROBINSON LIVE


SHIPYARD FIRE 1936

CLICK HERE

HISTORY REPEATS:
The worlds biggest 
wooden building burns
in Kittery Yard in 1936

STOBART DOES SHOALS

Maritime painter
John Stobart created
new works just for
Portsmouth! That is
a very big deal
READ MORE

 

SLAVE OWNING GUV?

Don't miss this debate
-- Did Gov. John Langdon
own slaves? Historians
say signs point to NO.
CLICK HERE


 

SHOW IS OPEN!

Six months of work
and the doors are
finally open free
so get on down to
UNDER THE ISLES
OF SHOALS


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Home Black History Stories Black Elders of Portsmouth
See my brand new autographed gift book click here
Black Elders of Portsmouth Print E-mail
Written by Valerie Cunningham   

ROSARY COOPER ( 1913 -- 1997 )

Rosary CooperI worked as the children's nurse for a family that owned hotels in Florida, Arizona and Maine...traveled with them...cared for their four children. The maids and cooks had their own cottage but I lived in the main house because I had to be near the children. I had a nice bedroom with a sitting room. At Oqunquit, I would take the children on picnics and to the beach. There were a lot of celebrities around there. Bette Davis would come by-- she liked to play with the children and make sand houses.

When I first went to the shipyard, I was a file clerk. And then they were training the women on the cranes...you had to climb all those catwalks...l'm not going to say I wasn't afraid, I was. But I wasn't going to give [the men] the benefit of the doubt of knowing it. They had the wall cranes but they didn't pay as much money as the 20 tons, so that's what I wanted. You...had three months to qualify and...six months to make your first rating. So I kept going up until I got to be a first mate's crane operator on the 20 ton crane. That's the one that lays the keels for the submarines, the cradle, and the engines, torpedo tubes, anything like that. I worked on those 110 feet in the air. So I did that during wartime.

I went to beauty school in Boston and when I finished there I worked at [a] beauty parlor for one year. I opened my own shop and after my husband died I kept working at that and in the house, with my tenants and everything. I had my house cut up into apartments and two rooms over the beauty shop for single guys, but most of them were couples from the air base and navy. At the same time, I was going to night school, Maclntosh Business College, when they had a branch here up on State Street. I took shorthand and typing and I got a certificate from there. I was always taking something.

(c) Valerie Cunningham

 

 



 

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Thursday, May 24, 2012 
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