Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Portland War Monument



In Portland Maine’s Monument Square is a Civil War monument. On top of the monument stands a woman holding a sword and a wreath of some kind in the other. She wears a robe and stands proud looking off into the distance. Her name is “Our Lady of Victories”. This Civil War monument is the largest I have seen so far both the statue and the base appear to be the same height. The massive statue captures everyone’s eye as they pass the square. As you follow down the statue to the base the grass catches your eyes. I know right grass but in the city surrounded by all this stone and metal seeing this grass patch acting like a final base of the statue does something to the eye.

As you follow along the statue you see group of bronze statues 3 soldiers and sailors standing in front of flags its difficult to see but I believe they are the American flag and the Maine flag together. Then on the next side is a plaque of dedication to the troops due to the height it is very difficult to make out the inscription. On the opposite side the inscription reads “Portland To Her Sons Who Died For The Union”.

It is an odd place for a statue; the other war statues have been in open places in fields or parks. I understand why it’s there, it’s a monument they can be placed anywhere. I have to go back to the grass I am sure that in the summer time the grass is even greener but it does something amazing the cobblestone leading up to the edge of the statue and then the granite all the way up the grass is a break from the grey of the city. Maybe that’s the park. The couple of feet of green grass is supposed to simulate the feeling of green grass and park. Either way the statue is amazing and it is worth the visit standing around looking into the past with the help of a granite monument.

John Ford Monument



First off I have always been a fan of John Ford. The first movie I saw of his was The Grapes Of Wrath I saw how brilliantly he brought the pain and suffering of those people who drove across America in search for work and money. As a huge fan of Westerns I then saw the amazing John Wayne in Rio Grande, and Stagecoach. I have been a huge fan of those movies and John Ford the film director behind them. This is why when I found that John Ford had a monument in Portland Maine I had to go and pay my respects.


In Portland Maine where Pleasant, Fore, and Center Street there is a statue of Ford seated in a directors chair. Looking out on the intersection legs crossed pipe in hand enjoying the scenery. 6 stone slabs on which are written several of his film credits from his documentary December 7th to his award winning adaptation of Grapes of Wrath surround him. As you follow down the statue to the very base of the statue near the side walk are many different inscriptions such as his marriage to Mary McBryde smith on 7/3/1920 or his graduating class of 1914 from Portland High School.

John Ford, originally John Martin Feeney, was born in Cape Elizabeth Maine on February 1, 1894. He is a Mainer who went to California to begin work as an actor/director. This statue is dedicated to his memory by his relatives.


This statue is fun. Not only do you get to see the man and learn about him through the different stones on his work in film and facts on the lower stones. John Ford was a great director, directing some of the best films and influencing some of the great film directors of my day. Like George Lucas and Martin Scorsese. I encourage everyone to go see and pay respects to the man. Look for him on near the intersection of Fore St, Pleasant St, and Center St in Portland Maine.

York War Memorial



While visiting the First Parish Church and the Old Gaol I Also stopped by the center of the historic section to see the York Civil War monument. I have, it seems been doing a study of different Civil War Monuments in Maine. I chose to highlight this monument because I think it is the nicest of the bunch.

The monument features a soldier leaning on a musket placed on top of a castle like tower. Its base has 2 crossed muskets and the year beginning the war and the year it ended inscribed in the stone in the middle section of the monument: Erected 1906, To Sons of York Who Served, Their Country in Army and Navy, and For Preservation of the Union. It was built and dedicated in 1906.

It is difficult to stand back and admire it because if you do you might get run over y a car. However to see it from afar is just as good. With the large tree standing behind it shading the soldier, and him looking out leaning on a musket you cant help but think about why it was erected, “To Sons of York Who Served”.

Westbrook Civil War Memorial

The Westbrook War memorial located in Riverbank Park is a great sight. It stands alone in the middle of a grassy patch one young soldier stands on top of the monument looking out rifle on his soldier seems to be walking or marching head at an angle looking off to his left.


The soldier himself is cast in bronze and stands on top of a granite structure. In the center of the monument is a plaque on which is written: “Westbrook Honors Her Sons and Daughters Who Strove By Their Loyalty Self-Sacrifice and Devotion to Preserve and Cement the Union in the Days of the Civil War 1861-1865”. It was erected and dedicated in 1917.

As you walk around the statue there is another bronze plaque that reads “The Demands For Loyalty To Our Country Are As Great Upon The Sons As They Were Upon The Sires The Safety Of The Country Lies In The Intelligence The Moral Character The Patriotism Of Her Citizens.” These words are a perfect summation of the atmosphere that the statue allows to those who visit it.

The statue is located in Riverbank Park, on Main Street in Westbrook Maine. its a nice enjoyable visit when its warm!

The Old Gaol, York Maine.




The present Goal that stands in the village of York was built in 1719 it replaced the building previously used as a jail in York that was built in 1656. The building had to be enlarged due to the massive influx of people into the territory. In 1790’s a debtors cell was added on to the building giving the building its modern shape. Not only did this building house the prisoners but also the goalkeeper and his family. In the beginning there were only two cells but updates added more cells and better conditions for prisoners. As you walk around the premise looking at the old wooden red structure you come to the side near the road and you see where the stocks used to stand. Up to 1760 the Goal was used as the prison for the entire territory of Maine when it began serving as the county jail for York. It then began to serve as a school, boarding house, and a warehouse until it was abandoned in 1895.


On July 1st 1900 the Old Goal officially became a “museum of colonial relics”. As you walk through you can see how the building operated during the later years. At the back of the building are three rooms used to show pictorial proof of the building through the ages. The Gaolers quarters have been restored to reflect the Gaoler William Emerson and his family in 1789.

It is interesting walking around the Gaol. You start at the side of the building walking around. You see the stocks and the kids miming being stuck in them and dads taking pictures. You hear the noise of the cars passing buy. However as you enter the gaol its like that all disappears (well you still have the kids and dads) but they have restored the inner cells and rooms of the building to accurately show what the jail was like back in 1789. They succeeded the as you walk around you get the sense of how the jail looked back when it was used as a jail.

The Old Gaol is located on 207 York Street, York, ME. located near the First Parish Church of York and the York Cemetery.