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NH Liberty Pole Guide for Idiots
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Written by J. Dennis Robinson
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Page 2 of 2
HISTORY OF THE PORTSMOUTH< NH LIBERTY POLE
Here is the rest of the story. This is not deep research, just data I cobbled together to understand what that largely unnoticed memorial stands for.
-- Liberty Bridge was first built across the tidal inlet at Puddle Dock around 1731. In those days the waterfront was the hub of Portsmouth activity.
-- Colonists were really ticked off by King George’s Stamp Act that imposed taxes on newspapers, stationery and documents. On September 12, 1765 a mob of Portsmouth, NH citizens hung colonial tax collector George Meserve in effigy in Haymarket Square. Meserve was not in town at the time and, sensing public outrage, quickly resigned his lucrative royal position.
-- Locals demanded a public resignation and later surrounded Meserve’s house. They reportedly paraded his royal commission through town on the tip of a sword and shipped it back to King George in England.
-- In memory of their act of civil disobedience, a group of local insurgents called the Sons of Liberty unfurled a banner here on a pole in the Puddle Dock area in 1766. The note read "Liberty, Property and No Stamp". Remember, this is almost a decade before the American Revolution.
- -- Over half a century later the city was in a huge economic slump, so locals pumped themselves up with patriotic fervor and celebrated Portsmouth 200th anniversary in 1823. The following year they erected a permanent pole 85-feet high at Liberty Bridge with a gilded carved eagle at the top. There is also a "liberty cap" or finial just below the eagle with thirteen silver balls. The original carver is presumed to be Laban Beecher (1805 –1876) of Boston who records show was then doing carvings on the sloop CONCORD. Beecher was only 19 years old at the time.
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So those who love Portsmouth history can now visit all three eagles and both Liberty Shields. And yes, that is the "real" Liberty Pole, except we’ve had to replace it a few times along the way. It is every bit as authentic as the rebuilt Old Ironsides and ten times more real than Plymouth Rock.
Copyright 2007 by J. Dennis Robinson. All rights reserved.
PHOTO CREDITS: Top photo of Liberty Pole by J. Dennis Robinson © SeacoastNH.com. Image of eagle and liberty cap by Jim Cerny © Jim Cerny, all rights reserved. Aerial view by Peter Randalland (c) Peter E. Randall/ All tights reserved. Historical images (c) Strawbery Banke Museum archive. .
J. Dennis Robinson is the editor and owner of the popular regional web site SeacoastNH.com. His book Jesse James: Legendary Outlaw has just been released in paperback and is available on Amazon.com.
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| Saturday, November 21, 2009 |
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