Advocates Awards 2020

Advocates Awards 2020

Since 1989, Portsmouth Advocates have bestowed awards of excellence to owners, designers and contractors whose exceptional work enhances the city’s unique historic character. The winners demonstrate a commitment to historic preservation and make Portsmouth a better place to live and work. While we typically gather together for an evening of celebration and camaraderie, we have moved our 2020 awards online. This year, we honor projects that restore the integrity of a resource, adaptively re-use a historic building through rehabilitation, celebrate property owners who consistently maintain their historic properties, and provide special recognition to an organization working to preserve a historic tree. We also commend two special individuals who have directly contributed to Portsmouth’s preservation story. Please join us in congratulating this year’s worthy class of award winners!

Restoring the Integrity of a Resource

Continued and Sensitive Maintenance of a Historic Property

Rehabilitation of a Historic Resource

Special Recognition

Arthur J. Gerrier Memorial Award

John Grossman Memorial Award


Restoring the Integrity of a Resource

Rockingham Condominium Association, Rockingham Lions at 401 State Street

The iconic gilded lions which guard entry into the Library Restaurant and the Rockingham Condominiums have been artfully restored. Believed to have been in place since the 1870s, after years of exposure, the cast iron lions required a complete overhaul. Recognizing their importance, the Rockingham Condominium Association contracted with Cassidy Brothers Forge of Rowley, Massachusetts to carefully disassemble, clean, and repair the four figures. The effort took nearly seven months to complete and the lions were returned to their posts in late October. Portsmouth Advocates commends the Rockingham Condominium Association’s commitment to historic preservation and awards them with the 2020 award for Restoring the Integrity of a Resource.

The former Rockingham Hotel is the third nineteenth-century hotel to sit in that location. The second hotel, constructed by Frank Jones in 1872, burned during a fire in 1884. Jones rebuilt shortly thereafter, and the Rockingham Hotel building we know today was constructed circa 1885. Converted from a hotel to condominiums in the 1970s, the lions have continued to stand as local landmarks to this day. For many years the lions graced stationery, advertisements, and souvenirs associated with the hotel, which used the tag line “at the sign of the lions.” The building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 and is a contributing resource to the Downtown Portsmouth National Register Historic District.


The Players’ Ring, Portsmouth Marine Railway Building, 105 Marcy Street

The Players’ Ring Theatre is a two and a half story gabled roof masonry building. Built in 1833 as the office and machine room for the Portsmouth Marine Railroad in a once active waterfront, the building now sits on the edge of Portsmouth’s Prescott Park and serves as a seventy-five-seat black box theatre. The building is listed with national significance to the National Register of Historic Places as a contributing resource to the Portsmouth Downtown Historic District. Used as a Marine Railway until 1855, it later became one of what were then many utilitarian waterfront buildings on Portsmouth’s waterfront. It served as a warehouse, factory, saloon, and by the early 20th century it had been converted into three townhouse style apartments. Starting in the 1930s the area around the Players’ Ring was transformed into Prescott Park which resulted in the demolition of the wharves and maritime buildings that surrounded the building for the waterfront landscape there today. Today the Players’ Ring building is one of only three maritime buildings to survive in Prescot Park. It was purchased for the city in the 1980s. The land was given over for use as a park and, in 1991, the building was converted into a theatre by the Players’ Ring. The building is owned by the City of Portsmouth with a lease arrangement to the Players’ Ring.

In partnership with the City of Portsmouth and using an assessment grant funded in part by the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance, the Players Ring embarked on a tiered plan to restore the exterior of the building. A roofing project c.2007 removed plywood boxes that covered the eaves and front cornice and restored the severely damaged brick sawtooth cornice on the front elevation. Using the building assessment as a guide, the Players’ Ring repointed the back (east) wall of the building, tuck-pointed areas of deterioration on the south and east elevations, replaced three modern doors on the back elevation with wood-clad doors, restored three historic doors on the front elevation, and replaced a metal door on the front elevation with a wood door that replicates in design an adjacent door believed to be original to the building. The project also replaced all the non-historic windows with true divided light wood windows and replicated and replaced the window frames which were deteriorated and suffered from several patchwork repairs. Preservation Timber Framing, with John Wastrom as mason, completed the majority of the work with the exception of the east wall which was completed by Bedard Preservation and Restoration with Stepping Stone masonry.


Sensitive Maintenance of a Historic Property

Carolyn Everest, 176 Cabot Street

Many often remark that the care of historic buildings is a labor of love, but it takes much more than that. It takes paint, and repointing, and a vigilant person to notice signs of deterioration and cut them off at the pass. Located outside of the local historic district, where there is no requirement to consider historic preservation practices when conducting building repairs, we are all lucky that the owner of 176 Cabot Street has chosen to treat the house like the historic building it is. The house is beautifully painted and retains much of its historic fabric, including wood windows and detailed bargeboards. Portsmouth Advocates is proud to present the Carolyn G. Everest Trust with an award for the continued and sensitive maintenance of this 173 year old building. Congratulations!

Constructed in 1847, the Joshua Brooks House at 176 Cabot Street is a Greek Revival-style house later updated with Gothic Revival-style trim at the gable and entry. The building is a contributing resource to the Downtown Portsmouth National Register Historic District.


Maarten & Johanna de Ruiter, 32 Miller Avenue

This handsome early 20th century suburban home facing Miller Avenue was begun in the summer of 1917 for John P. H. Chandler on a large lot of land he acquired from the estate of H. Fisher Eldredge.  Directly across Merrimack Street since the 1880s was the Montgomery House, elaborately enlarged by its second owner, heir of the Eldredge brewery, and landscaped in the 1890s by Charles Eliot of Boston. Until Chandler’s home was built, the land had served as a “front yard” for the large Eldredge estate. Only after Fisher Eldredge’s death was Chandler able to buy the land.

John Prescott Hale Chandler was the son of William E. Chandler, a founder of the NH Republican Party, former Secretary of the Navy and a U.S. Senator who died in December 1917. His mother who predeceased her husband, left her entire estate to their son, who was an active sportsman and golfer. His 1917 colonial revival home and rear garage were designed by Boston architect Robert Coit, who was the architect of several public buildings and suburban homes in Portsmouth during the teens and 20s.

Many still remember it as “The Governor’s House” the name of a bed and breakfast that was operated by John and Nancy Grossman from 1992-1997.  It reflects the long ownership by two-term NH Governor Charles M. Dale who acquired it when Chandler moved to Arizona.

Over the last few years the current owners Maarten and Johanna de Ruiter have focused their attention on landscape improvements and replacing in-kind the high quality original materials that contribute so much to the overall design. For this handsome effort at continued maintenance so important to protecting the character of the neighborhood Portsmouth Advocates commends them.


Historic New England, Rundlet-May House, 364 Middle Street

Rising up on its lush, green, terraced site for more than 214 years, the Rundlet-May House is arguably among the finest grand historic homes in Portsmouth. Built by textile merchant James Rundlet and his wife Jane, the exquisite attention to detail, from the grand staircase to the stunning gardens, is a breathtaking delight. The Rundlets filled their elegant estate with fine furnishings and incorporated the most cutting-edge technology of the day. With a collection of well-thought-out, connected buildings framed by elaborate gardens and a bold orchard, the Rundlet-May House itself has long been a stunning architectural masterpiece. In 1971, Ralph May, James Rundlet’s great-great-grandson, generously deeded the Rundlet-May House and its furnishings to the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England), and the public is privileged to visit and experience firsthand a history that has been very well maintained. With assistance from the New Hampshire Land and Community Heritage Investment Program (LCHIP), Historic New England was recently able to tackle some of the very necessary maintenance projects inevitable in a two-hundred-year-old property.

According to Bruce Blanchard, Piscataqua Region Preservation Manager for Historic New England, preservation work at the property included: in-kind replacement of the carriage house, barn, well-house, and kitchen roofs; repair of damaged sections of the main house fascia; replacement and repair of multiple gutter/downspout systems and fascia; replacement of the balustrade over the front entry portico; and repairs to the fence. That the Rundlet-May House stands in all of its historic fineness still, and is open to the public seasonably, is a testament to the dedication and care of Historic New England. We thank Historic New England and applaud your dedication and ongoing commitment to preserving historic architecture here in Portsmouth.


Rehabilitation of a Historic Property

GoodWork & Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests, Creek Farm

Creek Farm, threatened by demolition in 2019, is a true preservation success story. Eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places, the Arthur Astor Carey summer house or “Creek Farm” was designed by noted architect Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow for Arthur Astor Carey. Built beginning in 1887, the house is an outstanding example of the summer home movement in New Hampshire, and a rare survivor of the artistic summer colony at Little Harbor. In 1905 Russian and Japanese diplomats were informally entertained at Creek Farm during negotiations for the Russo-Japanese Peace Treaty. The house left the Carey family in the 1950s when Chester and Lillian Noel purchased the property and converted the home into eleven apartments. The Forest Society acquired the property in 2000.

After sitting predominantly vacant for two years, the future for this significant historic building looked bleak. Things brightened in November of 2019, when the property owner, Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests announced a new tenant for Creek Farm. GoodWork, a non-profit incubator, has brought an innovative but compatible new use to the facility. Creek Farm now serves as the GoodWork Headquarters and provides office, event, and meeting space. Additionally, six, below market-rate apartments offer housing options for non-profit workers.

We could not be more pleased to present our only 2020 award for Rehabilitation of a Historic Property to the team responsible for breathing new life into Creek Farm: Goodwork (tenant), Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests (owner), Chinburg Properties (contractor), JSA Design (architect), and Altus Engineering (civil engineer).


Special Recognition

Northeast Shade Tree

Landscape features, as well as man-made structures, are a crucial part of historic sites throughout the Seacoast area. Although gardens receive a lot of attention, significant trees are also a central part of many sites. Portsmouth Advocates is glad to recognize the many years of careful attention to the area’s historic trees by Northeast Shade Tree of Portsmouth. Taking the same care and dedication that a curator and conservator bring to examining a work of art, this firm evaluates and treats many historic trees, such as the horse chestnut tree (Aesculus hippocastanum) at the Moffatt-Ladd House & Garden in Portsmouth. This landmark tree, some 79 feet tall and with an average crown spread of some 70 feet, was planted by William Whipple, signer of the Declaration of Independence, after his return from Philadelphia in 1776. It was named the Millennium Landmark Tree for the State of New Hampshire and was also a Big Tree State Champion. For more than two decades, Northeast Shade Tree has helped ensure that this majestic tree, a prominent feature of the Seacoast for some 245 years, will survive for generations to come.

Jeffrey W. “Jeff” Ott (1949-2014), well known within the Portsmouth community and a member of the International Society of Arboriculture and other professional associations, founded Northeast Shade Tree in 1978 to pioneer modern arboriculture on the Seacoast of New Hampshire. David Steadman, owner and principal of Northeast Shade Tree since 2001, continues the tradition of caring for the health and beauty of New England arboriculture. Today the company services the Seacoast area, the Lakes Region of New Hampshire, Southern Maine, as well as Amesbury, Newburyport, and other communities on the North Shore of Massachusetts.


Arthur J. Gerrier Memorial Award

John Wastrom

Portsmouth Advocates’ Arthur J. Gerrier Award honors an individual of long demonstrated commitment to preserving and enhancing the unique historical character of this city.  This year’s honoree is John B. Wastrom for his gift of masonry preservation.

After earning a Bachelor’s degree in Anthropology and Archaeology from the University of New Hampshire in 1975, John soon changed his focus to preservation masonry.  While he studied part-time at the Boston University Masters Program in Preservation Studies, John helped Jay Smith renovate several brick buildings along Daniel, Sheafe, and State Streets.

Prior to graduating from BU in 1996, he unraveled some of the mysteries of the Warner House in Portsmouth, which became the subject of his master’s thesis. John has continued to maintain the masonry of the Warner House ever since.

Other local clients for whom John served as mason, project manager, or masonry consultant since 1976 reads like a list of the city’s major landmarks. Among his long list of projects are the following: the Portsmouth’s Market Square Project, Wentworth Coolidge Mansion’s Stonewall Project, multiple Historic New England properties, several Strawbery Banke Museum houses, the Wentworth-Gardner and Tobias Lear Houses, the Moffatt-Ladd House, John Paul Jones House, and The Rockingham Hotel condominiums.   For all of this and much more we honor John Wastrom with Portsmouth Advocates’ Arthur J. Gerrier Award for 2020.


John Grossman Memorial Award

Pat Meyers

The John Grossman Memorial Award recognizes an individual who makes a reality of an organization’s mission by bridging the theoretical and the practical.  John Grossman was a tireless supporter of Portsmouth non-profits and chair of Portsmouth Advocates for many years.

Patricia Meyers is a New Hampshire native whose work and reach has positively affected not only Portsmouth but communities all across the state of New Hampshire. Ms. Meyers has served on a number of nonprofit boards, including the Moffatt-Ladd House & Garden, the New Hampshire Historical Society, the Manchester Historic Association, and Strawbery Banke Museum. She has also served as board member and chair of the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance. Through her service, Ms. Meyers often shines the spotlight on others as she brings her extensive nonprofit experience and a tireless work ethic to further an organization’s work. Her unflagging work as a volunteer at the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance, New Hampshire’s statewide preservation non-profit, is legendary and has helped enable that organization to better serve the state’s communities.

According to the Preservation Alliance, she has promoted preservation’s role in community development and secured new advocates and supporters for preservation for three decades. With the statewide organization, she has helped interpret and promote significant Portsmouth preservation efforts to communities throughout the state. For example, the statewide non-profit launched its preservation easement program with the rehab and stewardship of the Pearl of Portsmouth and helped non-profits across the state consider variations of Strawbery Banke’s Heritage House Program when exploring long-term viability plans for their historic properties.

Ms. Meyers’ work and generosity has directly affected several other organizations within Portsmouth including the Players’ Ring Theatre, Strawbery Banke Museum, Historic New England, and the Warner House Association.


History. Arts. Culture.


✡ Happy Hanukkah ✡

✡ Happy Hanukkah ✡

The festival of lights starts this evening, and we know many of you are busy wrapping gifts, cooking feasts, and lighting candles. All the best to you and your family!

The Hanukkah card pictured above is available at our Museum Shop! Stop by online or in person today!


In the News!

Did you see us on NH Chronicle and in the Union Leader?! 😲🤩 Click here to see the segment on WMUR and here for the Union Leader article!


Free Take-Home Family Craft

Stop by this weekend and get a grab-and-go family craft! Kids can decorate and assemble their own winter hat ornament to make your home a little more festive. Just ask at the front desk!

See the Gingerbread Houses and vote on your favorites to win the People’s Choice awards! The last day to vote is December 16th!

www.PortsmouthHistory.org/gingerbread


You’ve Got Mail!

Executive director Brian LeMay’s office after the John Paul Jones Jubilee Art Auction this past September.

Thanks to everyone who has supported Portsmouth Historical Society this year! To our friends near and far, we are so grateful for your likes, shares, emails, texts, phone calls, visits, and suggestions. Your support and enthusiasm for our community quilt project, our historical quilt exhibition, the John Paul Jones House, and the annual Gingerbread House contest remind all of us here at Portsmouth Historical how much we LOVE being a special part of this “Tiny Bit Huge” community. As we approach the end of the year, and if we have entertained, educated, or inspired you, we ask that you consider an end-of-year gift to help us finish strong. Our Annual Appeal mailing is on the move thanks to the USPS, and if you haven’t received a letter in the mail, don’t fret! Just visit our WEBSITE HERE and you can make a donation today!


Season’s Greetings to Our Walking Tour Guides

A huge shout out to our fabulous Historical Walking Tour Guides! We started late, but ended the season successfully. Our new tour this year, “In The Steps of Washington,” proved to be very popular. We could not offer these tours without this dedicated group of local history buffs. Thanks to Randy Absher, Jeff Thomson, Fred Lewis, Linda King, Lauren Gianino, Elizabeth Sanborn, Alan Cohen & Joe Distefano.

Happy Holidays to all! 

—Robin Lurie-Meyerkopf
    Walking Tours Manager


Gingerbread Houses Spring Up Downtown

Gingerbread Houses Spring Up Downtown

Jackie van Berlo’s award-winning gingerbread recreation of Ceres Bakery on display in the Academy Galleries at the Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center until December 22. This year additional entrants in the 30th Annual Gingerbread Contest are on display in 20 downtown Portsmouth shop windows. A “Scavenger Hunt” form and prizes are available for families who are looking for a fun, safe, outdoor activity courtesy of the Portsmouth Historical Society. (Photo by Raya on Assignment)


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Meredith Affleck, Marketing Coordinator
Phone: 603.570.2493
Email: Meredith@PortsmouthHistory.org


The baking and decorating are done. The official awards are won. Now you can see more than 80 edible entries from the 30th Annual Gingerbread House Contest and Exhibition. Twenty are on display in a special new way—in shop windows across town.

The idea of putting exhibitions in storefront windows was actually first conceived when the Portsmouth Historical Society was planning its recent quilts show. “Unfortunately, the pandemic was just then beginning to grab us by our lapels and shake us, so everybody was a bit too overwhelmed to pursue the plan at that time,” says Brian LeMay, executive director of the Society. “But the vision of a town filled with gingerbread grew out of the same notion that history and the historical society are deeply embedded in the traditions of this community.”

“If only we could fill the streets with the smell of gingerbread and frosting,” mused LeMay. “That’s one thing that I associate with this annual exhibition in our galleries, and it still hits you when you walk in our doors.”

While the primary exhibition of 65 gingerbread creations can be seen seven days a week through December 22 at the Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center, downtown shoppers can see many through store windows. Young people who want to locate them all can join a scavenger hunt. Families can download a passport or “stamp sheet” with digital hints from PortsmouthHistory.org or pick up a copy at the Welcome Center and participating stores. After getting each site validated, contestants are eligible to win a $100 gift certificate from the Roundabout Cafe or Cure Restaurant. Visitors to the Welcome Center can also purchase $1 raffle tickets for a chance to take home a house as a holiday centerpiece.

“The gingerbread scavenger hunt has been a huge hit with families,” says Jen Mathieson, owner of Hello Lovely at 92 Pleasant Street. “It has given them a no-cost family-fun adventure that takes them to parts of the city they may not have explored before.”

Mathieson points to a mother-daughter team from out of town who followed the scavenger hunt from store to store last week. “The daughter was a HUGE history buff! She learned more about Portsmouth and its history in one day than I have learned in my 30 years of living here!”

Liz Rodgers, owner of the boutique Lizology at 16 Market Street says the contest is giving parents, kids, shoppers, and walkers a safe way to interact during the holiday. “I have absolutely loved the idea,” Rodgers says. “To see kids coming in with their parents with giant smiles on their faces because they located another gingerbread house has been—well, contagious.”

Historical Society exhibitions manager Meredith Affleck recalls discussing the idea while socially distanced with committee members last August. They were gathered around the swimming pool at the Rockingham Hotel, next door to the John Paul Jones House Museum.

“The idea was to offer something to the folks who didn’t feel comfortable going inside to see all the houses,” she recalls. “But we soon realized that the main benefit would be to local retailers.”

Welcome Center associate Robin Albert floated the idea during a Chamber of Commerce Zoom meeting and received an enthusiastic response. The tricky part, Affleck says today, was managing the number of participants so there would be enough houses to go around.

And not just houses. The winning professional entry offers an uncanny candy recreation of Ceres Bakery. “We’ve had trains, and boats, and igloos, and carousels, and all sorts of wonderful things,” Robin Albert told WMUR-TV. A recent episode of the popular Channel 9 program “Chronicle” features a colorful close-up tour of this year’s gingerbread projects by entrants of all ages, both amateur and professional. Voting for the “People’s Choice Awards” is ongoing through December 16.

A gingerbread model of Sander’s Fish Market can be seen in the window of Birch at 73 State Street. Owner Kate Belavitch says she is “thrilled” to host a display of another local business that she visits every week.

“I love this idea,” says Makenzie Dube from Off Piste on 37 Market Street. “I give this event five stars! Would totally do it again.”

Getting people outdoors, walking downtown in the crisp fresh air, and enjoying the holiday decorations is just one bonus of the gingerbread tour, says Meredith Affleck. “What started as a good idea for C19 reasons, we want to continue in the future because it boosts community involvement,” she says.

“The year-end holidays are celebrations of tradition, of family, and community,” director Brian LeMay adds. “So it’s appropriate that the Portsmouth Historical Society should be the home of this beloved, whimsical, multi-sensory holiday tradition.”

Participating stores include Birch, The Black Dog, Celtic Crossing, Clays, Cup of Joe Cafe & Bar, Eyelook Optical, Fatface, Good Vibes, Hello Lovely, Kennedy Gallery & Custom Framing, Lizology, Moonshine, Off Piste, Otter Creek Shop, Putting on the Glitz, Raleigh Wine Bar + Eatery, The Hammer Pub & Grille, Warner’s Card & Gift Shop, White Box Jewelers, and Wiglesworth’s Mercantile.

The exhibition is generously sponsored by Kennebunk Savings; Performance Business Solutions, LLC; Devine Millimet, Attorneys at Law; The Music Hall; and oHive.

The primary exhibition and holiday-stocked Museum Store are located at the Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center, 10 Main Street in downtown Portsmouth, NH. Visitors may also view the two large “Community Quilts” with individual quilt squares created by Seacoast citizens during the ongoing pandemic. Operated by the nonprofit Portsmouth Historical Society, the Welcome Center is warm and safe. COVID precautions include mandated masks, social distancing, controlled attendance, and a one-way path through the exhibition. The Museum Store also offers curbside pickup and local delivery. The Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center is open from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm daily through December 23. For more information on membership, shopping, exhibitions, and donations visit www.Portsmouthhistory.org or call 603-436-8433.

Covered in the Union Leader & Featured on NH Chronicle!

Jackie van Berlo and her recreation of Ceres Bakery featured in the Union Leader: “‘Mad scientist’ of a baker recreates Portsmouth’s Ceres Bakery one tiny croissant at a time.”

Tune into WMUR tonight at 7:00 pm for a special segment on the Gingerbread House Contest, on TV or livestream! Portsmouth Gingerbread Houses


Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center Open until 7:00 pm this Friday, December 4

Time to get a move on that holiday shopping! We’ve got something for everyone on your list. Online, in store, or over the phone, store manager Beth Gross-Santos can help you find the perfect present for that hard-to-shop-for friend. Just drop her a line! Beth@PortsmouthHistory.org.


Are We on Your Nice List?

We couldn’t serve Portsmouth and the Seacoast without you. Our board, staff, and volunteers work hard every day to make history, arts, and culture accessible to the community of residents and visitors to the region, and we need you on our team, too! Consider a donation in honor of a friend or loved one, or a gift membership this holiday season!


History. Arts. Culture.


30th Annual Gingerbread House Contest

30th Annual Gingerbread House Contest

Join us at Portsmouth Historical Society as we celebrate this sweet season with the 30th Annual Gingerbread House Contest and Exhibition from November 20 through December 22. This year, we are “taking it to the streets” with gingerbread creations on display both at the Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center and throughout downtown in shop and restaurant windows.


Theme

This year we’re suggesting historical buildings in gingerbread form! We’ve had a lot of great houses recreated in the past, but it doesn’t have to be a landmark. It can be your own home, a favorite downtown spot, or a bit of unique architecture.

Photo courtesy of Raya on Assignment
Slide left or right!

Participants, of course, had their own ideas. Some used our theme, but some just used their imagination!


Moffatt Ladd House

The Moffatt-Ladd House and it’s gingerbread incarnation by Dan Witham

The Moffatt-Ladd House is an elegant 18th century mansion overlooking the Piscataqua River. It is owned and operated by The National Society of Colonial Dames of America in the State of New Hampshire. It was the home of the Moffatts, Whipples and Ladds and their families. William Whipple was a New Hampshire signer of the Declaration of Independence. Whipple planted the large horse chestnut tree, located near the front of the house from chestnuts he brought back from Philadelphia in 1776.

Want to know more? Visit
The Moffatt Ladd House & Garden website at MoffattLadd.org


Warner House

The Warner House, photo by W. W. Owens, and the gingerbread version by Anne Muller

Constructed circa 1716, the Warner House is Portsmouth’s earliest surviving brick house and has been referred to as one of the finest examples of early-Georgian architecture in New England.

Inside, the staircase walls are finished with the earliest known wall murals in the country. Commissioned in 1718 by Archibald Macpheadris, the murals feature a variety of scenes, most notably of two of the four Mohawk representatives who traveled to London in 1710 to secure treaties with Britain.

Warner house remained in the same family until 1932 when the building was threatened with demolition and the Warner House Association was established. Since 1932 the house has operated as a museum.

Visit the Warner House website for more details at www.warnerhouse.org


Piscataqua Gundalow

A gundalow in summer, and Christmas on the Gundalow by the Hoerman Family

Gundalows were unique wooden cargo vessels that sailed on the tidal currents in the Piscataqua watershed from the mid-1600s until the early part of the 20th century. They were considered the “18-wheelers” of that period, transporting building materials, agricultural products, cordwood, textiles, mail, and other vital cargo to and from the deep-water port of Portsmouth.

With the advent of railroads and the development of cars, trucks, and roads, the need for gundalows slowly faded. The last operating gundalow was taken out of service in the 1920’s.

Want to learn more? Visit the Gundalow Company website at www.Gundalow.org


Prize Ribbons

Our community judges have awarded a plethora of ribbons to some very lucky and creative gingerbread builders!

Click for details


People’s Choice Awards

You can vote for your favorites! People’s Choice winners will be announced December 15!


Downtown Scavenger Hunt

New this year! Take a walk through Market Square and see all the houses on display in storefront windows! Visit all locations, collect the stamps, and turn in your stamp sheet for a chance to win a $100 gift certificate to Cure or the Roundabout Diner!


Gingerbread House Raffle

Five wonderful houses are up for grabs in our annual raffle! Win one to take home! Tickets are $1 and are available at the front desk at the Discover Portsmouth Welcome Center!

#55, Izzy’s Winter Holiday, by Izzy’s Winter Elves
#41, Story Land Castle, by Danielle Walker
#27, The Wentworth Coolidge Mansion, by Lindsay Caroll
#74, Victorian Holiday Splendor, by Abbie Law
#40, Moffatt Ladd House & Chestnut Tree, by Dan Witham

Thank you to our generous sponsors!