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The book tells of the life and work of an early 19th-century farming family in New Hampshire. The father uses an ox-cart to take their goods to market in Portsmouth, where they make the money to buy the things they need for the next year. Even the ox and cart are sold.
The film was released on VHS in 1988 by MCA Home Video and contains a trailer for the film Positive I.D. at the end. Universal released the film onto DVD on August 3, 2010. ...
The Seacoast African American Cultural Center is in the early stages of exploring whether it should buy “The Pearl,” a Black Heritage Trail landmark. 'The Pearl,' historic Black church in ...
Portsmouth Planning Board recommends city auction off tax-seized properties at 508 Richards Ave., 150 Bartlett St. and 323 Islington St.
He actively expanded his collection by advertising in magazines, [1] e.g. in the Winter 1959 issue of Film Quarterly "Wanting to buy: Old movie stills - ca. 1915 to 1935; early comedies -- well-known stars and productions." [3] In 1960, Bettmann moved it from his apartment at 215 East 57th Street, in New York City to the Tishman Building.
The ladies are all pushing 80 -- Mimi is 75, Annette is 72 and Linda is 71 -- but they look decades younger. Not a single one of those women looked over 40, let alone in their 70s.
Annette O'Toole (Hope McCrea) tells all! The actress gives a behind-the-scenes look at the new season, which premieres on December 19.
Macpheadris's only surviving child was Mary Macpheadris Osborne. In 1760, the recently widowed heiress married Jonathan Warner, a Portsmouth merchant and widower of her deceased cousin, Mary Nelson Warner. Jonathan Warner brought eleven-year-old daughter Mary "Polly" Warner, his only child, to live in the house.