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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 Places & Events Historic Portsmouth We Tried to Save the Murals
See my brand new autographed gift book click here
We Tried to Save the Murals Print E-mail
Written by SeacoastNH Archive   

325_00SeacoastNH.com Presents
Historic Portsmouth #325  

According to Harold “Whitey” Whitehouse, Jr. a Portsmouth resident since 1928, the four lost WPA-era murals at the Middle School were destroyed in the mid-1970s. As a member of the school board, Whitehouse was on the Joint Building Committee that elected, after much deliberation, to demolish the 1930s auditorium to make way for 13 new classrooms. )Continued below with photos) 

 

READ ALL ABOUT the historic murals  

“We were upset, but there was no way we could save them,” Whitehouse says about the murals today. “We had to do something. The building was bulging at the seams.” John Sullivan, who was on the school board for 20 years, says that the pictures by Gladys Brannigan were painted on the wall, not on canvas as her WPA commission states. Although neither Sullivan nor Whitehouse actually witnessed the demolition, they remain certain that the murals could not have been salvaged. Readers who believe they have seen the murals in recent years, they say, must be mistaken. “I assure you that, being on the school board, if there was any way of storing or preserving those murals, we would have done it,” Sullivan says. Both men attended the Middle School in the 1930s and remember the murals vividly. Whitehouse was a boy scout at the time as shown in the Depression-era photo above. The second photo shows Whitehouse as a baby with his mother and grandmother. These photos appear in his 2008 memoir of growing up in Portsmouth entitled “Home by Nine: The Real South End.” Whitehouse joined the Navy at 17, worked 25 years at the Portsmouth Herald and served 12 years on the city council. According to Whitehouse, only 75 copies of his book remain on sale in local bookstores, and he currently has no plans to reprint. (Photos courtesy Harold Whitehouse)

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