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THE WEIRS TIMES, Thursday, October 28, 2010
HISTORY from 23 and brought up a cod he bestowed upon the Ameri- can hero. Nearby a boat- load of amateur bands- men dispensed martial airs that might have dis- couraged even patriotic fish. Washington noted in
his diary that Portsmouth ladies “were in greater proportion with much blacker hair (unpowdered) than are usually seen in the southern states.”
“There are some good
houses,” he wrote. “but in general they are indif- ferent and almost entirely made of wood. I was told that on account of the fog and damp they deem them wholesomer and for that reason prefer wood buildings.” He spent one day in Ex-
eter where a lavish enter- tainment was provided, but not realizing the dual nature of the state capital Washington declined to
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remain for a big banquet that night. In his diary he feared he might have given offense for “a jealou- sy subsists between this town (where the Legisla- ture alternately sits) and Portsmouth, which had I known it in time would have made it necessary to have accepted an invita- tion to a public dinner.” In spite of the over
whelming public ovations, Washington took time to call upon the aged mother of Tobias Ler his confi- dential secretary, whose home was Portsmouth. In comparison with his native and far more fertile Virginia plantations, New Hampshire appeared a bit harsh and sterile, but Washington had the good sense and good manners to refrain from comment. He could and did see that this corner of his new re- sponsibility had a bounti- ful future in ship building, fisheries and lumber oper- ations. However onerous the protracted ovations must have become George Washington accepted the offerings in the spirit in which they has been given and then - as always - was his own best public rela- tions man.
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