Revolution 250 Podcast
Revolution 250 Podcast
The 1774 Raid on Fort William & Mary
On December 14, 1774, John Langdon and a group New Hampshire Patriots stormed the lightly garrisoned Fort William & Mary to seize its stores of gunpowder and cannon. Sarah Vedrani tells us about the raid, about the historic events being planned in commemoration. Now Fort Constitution on an active Coast Guard base in New Castle, (the only New Hampshire town which is entirely on islands), the Fort is still worth visiting! She also tells us about the exciting happenings at Portsmouth's Strawbery Banke, a ten-acre historic neighborhood, and the living history at the Colonel Paul Wentworth House in Rollinsford.
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answers.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Revolution 250 podcast.
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I'm Bob Allison.
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I chair the Rev 250 advisory group, and our guest today is Sarah Vedrani.
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And Sarah Vedrani is an independent scholar, historian, and she's actually spent more than a decade now delving into the history of the seacoast of New Hampshire.
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Sarah, I'm glad you could join us.
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Thank you so much for having me.
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And of course, one of the big events that happens on the coast of New Hampshire in the year leading up to the outbreak of the war is in December of 1774 at Fort William and Mary.
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Can you tell us about this?
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Yeah, so there's a lot of assumption out there that kind of the first large scale opposition to the British leading up to 1776 is Lexington and Concord in April of 1775.
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But being from Seacoast, New Hampshire, and knowing a little bit more of that history, I'm sure the Rhode Islanders will contest this too.
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But being from New Hampshire, we like to say that the first
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uh armed opposition actually happened in newcastle in december of 1774. um so we have a site that's currently called fort constitution the 18th century it was known as fort william and mary
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It was part of a system of fortifications that was built to protect Portsmouth Harbor.
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There were two on what is now the New Hampshire side and two on what is now the main side, what was Massachusetts at the time.
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And Fort Constitution is the last mostly intact structure to still exist.
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In December of 1774, it was not very active.
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It was a very small provincial garrison.
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There was a single commanding officer and his family that lived on site.
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And then a rotating group of provincial soldiers that would have manned the garrison.
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What made it really significant to General Gage was the fact that it housed a significant amount of arms and ammunition.
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And this also would have made it significant to the opponents of General Gage.
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Absolutely.
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Absolutely.
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So in the very late evening hours, mid-December 1774, Paul Revere shows up in Portsmouth at Stoodley's Tavern and is looking for Samuel Cutts.
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He is spreading news.
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He has information that General Gage is sending a ship or possibly two up the Piscataqua to empty that armory at Fort William & Mary.
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And obviously, news in taverns spreads like a wildfire.
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And there are at least a dozen taverns right in that area in Portsmouth.
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So the news spreads very, very quickly.
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The following morning, 400 men
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show up at the fort.
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Wow.
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It's quite a sight for the five-man garrison that is present.
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Now, were the five guys there, the five soldiers there, were they from Britain or were they locals?
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They were all locals.
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They were provincials.
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Okay.
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Yeah, it's a very small force by that point.
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You know, there is...
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There isn't a lot of fear that it is a site that's going to be attacked, raided.
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Portsmouth is considered a relatively safe city up until this point.
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Earlier in the 18th century, there would have been a larger garrison.
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By the 1770s, it's significantly reduced.
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Part of that is that sense of safety.
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The other part is a lack of funding.
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Right.
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So earlier in the 18th century, there's at least 10 or a 20 man garrison there at any time.
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Over the decades, the 1750s and the 1760s, New Hampshire's General Assembly votes to defund that garrison several times.
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Wow.
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um so all that's there essentially on that night is um five men captain cochran the commanding officer his wife and their children wow and they are faced with a mob essentially how many children do they have they had three and they were all very young as far as we can tell they were all probably right around 11 or 12 or younger and where is cochran from where is cochran from
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He's also a local.
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So he and his wife are both local as well.
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His father was commander of the garrison before him.
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So there is a family history here.
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Now, they somehow, I mean, I'm just trying to get...
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Were they like part of the militia who then are posted here?
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It's unclear.
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A couple of our other committee members know a little bit more of the military history than I do.
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From my understanding, his position was given to him by his father.
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So he might or might not have been a commissioned officer within the British Army.
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We're not entirely sure.
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We do know that he had the ability to recruit, and he did so locally at what is now it's referred to as William Pitt Tavern.
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In the 18th century, it would have been Stavers Tavern.
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It's now part of Strawberry Bank Museum.
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He posted several ads in the late 1760s and early 1770s that he was actively recruiting out of Savers Tavern.
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And he wasn't terribly successful.
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There's one instance that was recorded in the newspaper that he had his men march around the entire city of Portsmouth, colors flying, drums beating, trying to bring up some kind of activity.
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Not a single person.
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Didn't work.
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Not a good recruiting drive.
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Not at all.
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So then Cochran and the provincial troops he have would have known these 400 people.
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Oh, absolutely.
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Absolutely.
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They would have frequented the same taverns.
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They possibly would have attended church services together.
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If they had children the same age, they might have attended schooling together.
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It's absolutely possible that he would have been at least familiar with a significant number of people who showed up that night.
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Okay.
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So then what happens when these guys show up?
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And what are they demanding?
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So it starts off relatively civil.
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It starts off with a demand that Cochrane surrenders himself and that they are allowed to enter the fort.
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And obviously that is denied.
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And that's where it gets a little fuzzy and that's where it gets a little more violent.
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So all of a sudden, 400 men rush through the gates.
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There are several accounts from later on that the captain is either restrained or tied up.
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I feel like I've read one account somewhere where he is actually tied to the flagpole.
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Yes.
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Part of it is definitely restraining him and keeping him away.
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Yeah.
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One of the provincial soldiers is injured, I believe in the leg somehow.
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It's a minor injury.
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And at some point, and this is my favorite part of the story, because, of course, we have to throw some women's history in here.
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Cochran's wife notices that her husband is being restrained and somehow gets a musket in her hand.
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Wow.
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And with a bayonet attached and starts waving it at the mob in front of her.
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While she is actively being restrained herself, she somehow breaks free, gets this musket and is...
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know trying to fend off the crowd somebody manages to get the musket out of her hand um and then according to some of those later accounts about 10 seconds later she has a pistol in her hand that she is pushing at the crowd wow um i which i i love um sarah cochran is a fascinating story of her own um but of course this is her home
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Oh, right.
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Yeah.
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Your home.
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You know, there isn't much left to the fort today besides the outside fortifications.
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And when you see the site today, it's very easy to forget that this was a workplace, that this was, you know, a place where vendors came very frequently to do their business.
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Right.
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And that this was a home for a family with children.
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And she was going to defend that home any way she could.
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Yeah, yeah.
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Unfortunately, she didn't do a very good job.
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Well, I mean, she had 400 men and she's kept getting restrained.
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Exactly, exactly.
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So obviously the garrison is overtaken very easily.
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There are several tons of gunpowder that are taken from the fort as well as muskets.
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They are loaded onto carts brought over to the wharves where they're loaded onto gondolos.
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What's a gondola?
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So a gondola is a very New England invention.
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It's a very long, shallow bottom boat.
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It's a very flat bottom boat.
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And they were designed for some of New England's shallower rivers so that goods could be taken by water from the port towns instead of travel by land.
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Travel by land was incredibly expensive for goods at that point.
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But New Hampshire, especially Seacoast New Hampshire, has a lot of very shallow rivers to get into some of those inland towns.
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So if you're familiar with the area going north where I am into Dover and Summersworth or going into Exeter and the Durham area,
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You can take a Gundalo, load everything up like you need to, and just sail it right up the river.
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And that's exactly what they did.
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They distributed powder all over New Hampshire into Seabrook and Hampton.
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A large quantity went into Exeter and then up into Durham and Dover and Somersworth as well.
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And they did not stop.
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They did not stop.
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They came back a second day.
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Okay.
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Wow.
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Wow.
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And what do they do on the second day?
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So the second day, they actually took pieces of artillery.
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Okay.
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As well as more muskets.
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Now, are the Cochran still being restrained?
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So at this point, I'm not 100% sure on where all of the players were on the second day.
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Again, the military history side of things is not my forte.
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But it was significantly easier for the mob to enter the fort on that second day.
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As far as I know, essentially,
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kind of just let in.
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But there were pieces of artillery that were taken on that second day, as well as significantly more muskets.
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Sarah, I know you're not a military historian, but do you want to venture a guess if Sarah Cochran were in command instead of her husband, but things have turned out differently?
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Honestly, probably not.
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These were very determined men.
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The information that comes out, when somebody rides into your city and says, this is happening, that news spreads like wildfire.
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There's very little that you can do to control it.
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And
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I like to think maybe that she could have done a little bit more reasoning.
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I get the sense, at least from local records, that Captain Cochran himself was not the most popular of men in town by 1774.
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But I think this probably would have gone the same way whoever manned it.
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So that second day, the story goes that the pieces of artillery that were taken were then actually used the following year at Bunker Hill.
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Okay.
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As well as a significant amount of the powder that was taken.
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Interesting.
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So there is a nice connection to Massachusetts there.
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There is.
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And some later altercations.
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This is a great story.
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We're talking with Sarah Vedrani, who is an historian of the coast of New Hampshire.
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She's done a lot of
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work at Strawberry Bank and at the Paul Wentworth House and other sites.
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And we're talking about what happens at Fort William and Mary in December of 1774.
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Now, who are some of the, you know, we've talked about these 400 guys.
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Do they have any leaders or any people who stand out?
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They did.
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They did.
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And they were some very significant names that we will continue to hear in the next, you know, 12 months or so after this happens.
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So on day two that we were just talking about of this raid, John Stark is actually commanding this group who comes in.
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And obviously he is made famous during the French and Indian War, but also continues on during the revolution.
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John Langdon.
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Hmm.
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who's another very famous local resident.
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If you come to Portsmouth, you can still tour his house.
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It's a beautiful property.
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He is involved in- China's constitution.
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Absolutely, yes.
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So there are some very big players.
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After this happens, Governor Wentworth, our last royal governor, issues a proclamation and it's published all over the newspapers in town, essentially saying, we will find you.
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Mm-hmm.
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will be arrested, all 400 of you.
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Wow.
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Good luck, Governor Wentworth.
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It never happened.
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But he knew, you know, that some of those big players in town, you know, these weren't just kind of the rabble of Portsmouth.
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These were your Moffitts and your Shapleys and your Sheafs.
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And, you know, all of these very significant families in Portsmouth who probably had at least one member who showed up to this thinking, you know, with that mob mentality, who's going to know?
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Yeah.
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That's true.
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That's true.
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So they get all this stuff out.
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The governor can't find and arrest anyone.
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So then.
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What happens?
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I mean, what's the new?
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Nothing, really.
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That's the funniest part of the story.
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Nothing ever really comes of this.
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The powder is distributed.
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It gets distributed out to the newly formed Continental Army.
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When that happens, that's how it gets down to Massachusetts.
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Captain Cochran is exiled.
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You mean so the Patriots exile him?
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The state of New Hampshire exiles him.
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A little bit later on, if you jump forward a little bit to 1778, the state of New Hampshire posts a list.
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It's been developed by the General Assembly of 78 individuals who are unfriendly to Congress and the Patriot cause.
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And Captain Cochran and his family are on that list.
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Now, he has already been booted out.
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He is in New York at this point.
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Okay.
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But Sarah and the children are still in Portsmouth.
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And so the later half of her story is that when this list comes out of all of these exiled individuals, she successfully petitions the state of New Hampshire to leave with their household possessions.
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Oh, wow.
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As well as her children.
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So she has essentially a wagon train with her of all of their household possessions.
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And she heads out to New York with him.
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But that that's essentially all that happens.
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The fort is for a very brief time maintained kind of as an outpost, a portsmouth itself.
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um during the later years of the revolution becomes uh essentially a drop-off point for prize vessels that are captured by the continental navy um and portsmouth's maritime court is very active in 1775 and 1776. um but after that the fort essentially gets lost to time um and that's part of the reason now why there really isn't a lot of it left besides the outside fortification walls
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It essentially gets forgotten.
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Really?
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So it's not like other forts that then are redone in, say, the War of 1812?
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There would have been improvements made later on, but most of those structures are gone.
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The Powder Magazine still stands.
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That's a brick structure.
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But that's essentially it.
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Is it possible to visit any of the remnants of the forts?
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It is.
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So it is currently both a state historic site as well as an active Coast Guard station.
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So it's a little bit tricky to get there.
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Thankfully, the town of Newcastle
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is very good about signage.
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So the town of Newcastle, if you've never been, is an island.
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And so there's wonderful, tiny little narrow roads to get out there.
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But there is a nice little parking and a picnic area.
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And if you're familiar with the Freedom Trail, there is a line across the postcard parking lot that will get you from your visitor parking lot to the fort itself.
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There are currently some new interpretive panels being developed.
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as part of this project to give a little bit more information on the history of the fort.
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And we're not sure if those are going to include an audio tour or not.
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That's something we've been talking about.
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But there is also an organization called Friends of Fort Constitution that help maintain and promote the history of the fort.
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And they have a really wonderful website with endless information on the history of the fort itself as well as current restoration efforts.
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Do you know when it gets renamed from Fort William and Mary to Fort Constitution?
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I don't, but I believe it is during the Revolution.
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Because obviously that William and Mary name is a whole.
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I want to say it happens fairly quickly after Cochran is exiled.
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We have a Castle William on Castle Island in Boston becomes Fort Independence actually in 1798.
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President Adams renamed it then.
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Interesting.
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And the same monarch, William, in both cases has his name on it.
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So are you making plans to commemorate this in December of 1774?
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We absolutely are.
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So we are just about a year and a few months away at this point.
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Our committee has been working already for about a year to develop plans with both the towns of Newcastle and the city of Portsmouth.
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So if you're familiar with some of the other 250th anniversary events that have already happened, we are pulling, I would say, fairly heavily from the Boston Massacre 250th commemoration that happened a few years ago.
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A few of us that are on our planning committee were a part of that event as well.
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So we have been kind of leaning on things like that to help decide, you know, how we figure out what this event is going to look like.
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We are incredibly lucky that a lot of the structures that were involved historically are still standing, not only the fort, but Stoodley's Tavern.
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as well as John Stavers Tavern, which are both now part of Strawberry Bank Museum.
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So we are partnering with Strawberry Bank as well as the cities of Portsmouth and Newcastle, as well as the Portsmouth Gundalo Company and a few other organizations.
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So we are incredibly excited of what's coming.
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We're working to develop some material culture guidelines.
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and some interpretation for the morning that's going to happen.
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This will be an all day event, an all weekend event.
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Of course, it's going to be in December in Portsmouth on the water.
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Yeah.
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Hopefully that doesn't deter folks from coming out.
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We are also looking to bring this to a broader audience, obviously knowing that it's winter and it's going to be cold and knowing that we have some structural limitations to work around with the site.
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We are looking to develop some digital programming and some virtual programming as well for this.
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There's a lot happening.
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That's great.
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We're talking with Sarah Vedrani, who is an independent historian, researcher, living history interpreter, getting us excited about what's going to go on in Newcastle and Portsmouth in the next year.
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Now, I know there's a lot of really exciting living history happening in that area.
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And I'm wondering, you know, what do you have programming there in nicer weather?
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And then maybe we could also talk a bit about Strawberry Bank.
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Yeah, so if you've never been to Portsmouth, Strawberry Bank is a really fabulous site.
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Think Colonial Williamsburg, but 400 years of history all at once as opposed to one moment in time.
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Strawberry Bank's a really unique site in that it is, after 400 years, still a living, breathing neighborhood.
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So all of the structures within what is now Strawberry Bank Museum
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are original to that site, with the exception of two or three buildings.
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And the museum really works hard to interpret all of those 400 years of history.
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So the earliest structure dates to 1695.
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And it's currently being renovated to reflect that, which is very exciting.
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And the most recent history that's interpreted is the 1950s.
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Wow.
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When the museum first opened to the public and the last residents of the neighborhood moved out.
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So we are incredibly lucky to have use of that site.
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Strawberry Bank.
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is I think one of those organizations that really tries to tell the entire story.
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So we've been talking a lot about Stavers Tavern and the fact that it was used for recruiting by General Cochrane.
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The owner of that tavern, John Stavers,
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was himself a known loyalist in town.
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He has his own sordid history that could have its own podcast episode very easily.
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I portrayed his oldest daughter for five or six years.
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And, you know, being able to tell the revolutionary story from the perspective of someone who
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maybe didn't care so much about the outcome or didn't care so much about a certain side of it is a really wonderful way to learn the history and to teach the history.
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And especially being able to talk about those taverns because we have both of those taverns on site.
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So Woodleys Tavern where Paul Revere first arrived, unfortunately is no longer a museum building.
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It's now the museum's office building.
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I see.
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But we still have Savers Tavern with William Pitt Tavern.
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And that really, you know, would have been a hub in the 18th century.
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That's how this information spread.
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Did you get a sense, Sarah, that the clientele of the taverns would have been different?
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um you know studley's and stavers in particular were in fierce competition with each other for a very long time um so they probably liked to say that their clientele was a little bit different in reality they would have been very similar um and there's a weird reason for that and the reason is that studley's tavern doesn't sit where it sat originally studley's is one of the buildings that was moved it was moved from across town okay um
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And they were both known for a very long time as some of the premier taverns in Portsmouth.
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They were known for serving very expensive imported drinks like wine, specifically port wine.
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They were known for.
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attracting certain kinds of entertainment.
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Stavers Tavern, for example, hosted an opera singer from London in 1776.
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Stoodley's, I believe, had a lion in the 1790s.
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So they were attracting a very similar kind of clientele.
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These were folks who were not, you know, the salt of the earth kind of folks.
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It's not the longshoremen.
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Exactly.
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It's not your dock workers.
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It's not your rope walk workers.
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These are folks who can afford some of life's luxuries.
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So Revere would have known which tavern to go to where he's going to find John Langdon and his other characters.
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Absolutely.
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It would have been either Stoodley's, Stavers, or Zachariah Foss's, which was further into town.
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But obviously, if he's coming from the south, this is probably the closest he's going to get.
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Interesting.
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Okay.
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So now you were talking about interpreting this from the viewpoint of someone who isn't committed to one side or the other.
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Now, you also do a bit with the 10th regiment of foot or you have done with
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I do.
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Talk a little bit about that experience.
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I do.
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So I have been with His Majesty's Tent since I was 16.
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And I started out as a soldier.
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I have loved history since I was in middle school.
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I have been in and out of local museums since I was in high school.
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And I never enjoyed the way history was taught in school.
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And my parents started taking me to historic sites and taking me to reenactments.
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And I was on Lexington Green one year for the Patriots Day commemoration and saw this group.
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and said, who is this?
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And that was it, I joined.
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And the rest they say is history.
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So I was a soldier in the light infantry for 10 years.
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And then I stepped down, I handed in my musket and now I serve as a camp follower.
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So traded places just a little bit.
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What do you mean by camp follower?
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So in the British Army,
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camp followers were essential.
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When you join the British Army in the 18th century, you join for life.
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And I always say, you know, one of the easiest ways to get someone to travel halfway across the world for work is to let them bring their family with them.
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Right.
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So the British Army accounted for a certain number of women and children per regiment.
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It's a rough estimate of about five to six percent of rations per regiment were handed to women and children.
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And it wasn't just the officers, the high ranking officers who were bringing their families with them.
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So these women did have to work.
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It was expected that they were productive in camp.
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In a modern sense, in the living history hobby, we cook.
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We do a lot of cooking.
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But we also talk about nurses.
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We talk about women who served as servants for officers.
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We talk about women who would have done laundry and cooking and darning and all sorts of things to be productive in camp and stay with their families.
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Serena Zavin has a great book about the Boston Massacre, the family history that talks about these women and families who are traveling with the soldiers.
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Absolutely.
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I got the opportunity to meet her for the Boston Massacre 250th, and it was perfect timing.
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I was portraying Isabella Montgomery that year, who is, of course, known for her famous screaming match with Susanna Cathcart in the street before the event.
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And she came up to me.
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We had just recreated our fight.
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And she came up to me and I was still in character.
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And she was very timid.
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She said, are you Isabella Montgomery?
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And I turned around, who's asking?
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And I recognized her and immediately dropped character and started fangirling.
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It's phenomenal.
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I devoured it in about two days.
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But it's fabulous that she's done that research because it is so overlooked how important these women were and really what their role was.
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So I'm hoping to bring a little bit of that to this event as well.
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That's good.
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That's good.
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I'm wondering if we could talk a little bit more then about planning this and what you see is how
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You hope all of this will come together to get a new generation excited about doing history.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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So I guess I'm very lucky that I am, I think, that new generation.
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I joined and then my parents joined this hobby and this crazy history world.
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So I was really the one in my family that kind of spearheaded this.
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But we are obviously doing a very traditional reenactment commemoration.
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So there will be a raid on the fort.
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There will be a march of a very significant number of men from Portsmouth to Newcastle that will then enter the fort.
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And there will be space to view that, just like there would be at any other reenactment that you might attend, whether it be in Boston or Lexington or Virginia.
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But we are also really hoping to lean heavily on some new digital technologies.
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We have discussed having GoPros on a couple of our mob members so you can see the march and the raid from their perspective.
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We have talked about some pre-event events that might be live streamed.
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We're going to lean heavily on social media in the coming months to really promote this.
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And, you know, I will say for the living history hobby and for the larger historical community, it's not just us younger folks that are really leaning into that.
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I think the entire community has really embraced it because we do know how much of an impact we can have.
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I think back to 2021 for Patriots Day when Minuteman Park was planning all of their events and everything still had to be virtual.
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And I remember Jim Hollister saying afterwards, you know, we reached 100,000 people this week.
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between comments and likes and shares and everything else.
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And that's really the impact that we'd like to have.
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Not just the folks who show up physically to see this, but for the folks who do show up physically, we are planning all day.
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There will be things going on in Portsmouth as well as things going on in Newcastle.
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Wonderful.
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Jonathan Lane, our producer, is also, I think, must be something of a summer soldier and sunshine patriot.
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He points out it's two miles alone.
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Very much so.
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But, you know, I think having an event like this, too, can spark other things.
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I remember when Jim organized a wonderful program around Faneuil Hall commemorating the arrival of the customs commissioners.
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Yes.
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And we had this procession with around.
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And people were there saying, does this happen every week?
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Right.
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You wish that it would.
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Exactly.
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Oh, yeah.
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I the year we did the Boston Massacre 250th, we had the rope walk brawl out in front of Faneuil Hall.
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And I was filming it for the guys who were participating.
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The number of folks who walked up to the the park rangers and said, what?
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Use this.
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And that's really what we'd like to do as well.
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Strawberry Bank is working with us to develop a little bit of programming beforehand.
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So hopefully sometime next year, visit Strawberry Bank Museum.
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You might come across Captain Cochran doing a little bit of recruiting.
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Great.
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Very good.
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To get people excited for sure.
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Now, Sarah, you've really whet our appetite for things happening in New Hampshire.
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I wonder if there are other events, 250th events that you can foresee happening in New Hampshire.
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You know, New Hampshire is a tough state.
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Once this event happens, not much else happens in New Hampshire, unfortunately.
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John Stark goes to Bunker Hill and he goes to Bennington.
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Exactly, exactly.
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You know, a traveler.
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We would.
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You know, there's been talk, I think, for a long time of seeing the Ranger reproduced and doing something around John Paul Jones.
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I've been hearing that conversation since I was in my teens.
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I would love to see that gain a little more ground.
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Portsmouth this year is celebrating its 400th anniversary.
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So I think that has kickstarted a lot in the city.
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And I do see, you know, places like Strawberry Bank and the Warner House and the Moffett Ladd House.
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um getting very interested too in doing some things um so i i would love to see this kind of spark something that would be that would be ideal really
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Well, thank you.
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And can you tell, you've also, I should mention that Sarah Vedrani, in addition to being really excited about doing this, does have a bachelor's in history and a master's in heritage studies from Regis University, Regis College.
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And you're also on the board of the Paul Wentworth House, the Colonel Paul Wentworth House.
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Can you tell us a bit about the Colonel Paul Wentworth?
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Is he related to Benning Wentworth?
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Yes, they were a branch of the family.
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The Wentworths were one of the largest families on the seacoast as well as being one of the most influential.
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This particular branch of the Wentworth family went out into what was at that point the frontier of New Hampshire.
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The house was originally built in 1701.
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We are an original 18th century structure.
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The house where it currently sits is about 150 yards back.
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from where it was built originally.
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So it stood in its original location until the 1920s when it was moved.
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It was sold and moved to Massachusetts.
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Wow.
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Yeah.
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Crazy.
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You know, just with like teams of oxen and logs, you know, the old fashioned way.
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Yeah.
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And then in the early 2000s, the house went up for sale again.
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Mm hmm.
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And an organization was formed.
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We're called ARCH.
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It's the Association for Rollinsford Culture and History.
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And this organization was founded to save this house and bring it back to Rollinsford.
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So that happened in 2005.
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We have members of our board currently who have been
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on this board and involved since day one.
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And I think that is incredible.
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I have been volunteering with the organization since 2007 and was asked to join the board last year.
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It is a wonderful house.
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Like I said, it's a fully original house with functioning fireplaces.
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So I can wake up in the morning in front of the kitchen hearth
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and make breakfast.
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Wow.
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It's a really phenomenal site.
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We have an opportunity to talk about agricultural history, to talk about industrial history as well, because we were so connected and close to Portsmouth.
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We have an opportunity to talk about, you know, a self-sustaining site.
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The house would have been a functioning farm in the 18th century.
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So we can talk about New Hampshire crafts.
35:39.424 --> 35:40.165
We can talk about
35:40.525 --> 35:41.025
furniture.
35:42.046 --> 35:43.847
We can talk about imports and exports.
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We can talk about the frontier.
35:48.230 --> 35:56.635
The Dover, Rollinsford, Summersworth area in the early 18th century was an area that was very afraid of attacks by Native Americans.
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There were 60 garrison houses in and around the Dover, Rollinsford area in that time.
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And we can talk about the evolution of a family.
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And it's a really fascinating site.
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It's our little hidden gem just up the road from the seacoast.
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Interesting.
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Where in Massachusetts was it?
36:19.426 --> 36:20.406
Dover, Massachusetts.
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So it went to Dover, Massachusetts.
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Okay, yeah.
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It did.
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Yeah.
36:25.008 --> 36:28.190
The only thing that did not go with it was the original chimney stack.
36:28.770 --> 36:33.654
Oh, well, the chimney stack was dismantled and the bricks were donated to Historic New England.
36:34.694 --> 36:41.158
So when the house was moved again back to Rollinsford, Historic New England was contacted and said, Hey,
36:42.379 --> 37:02.939
this was a while ago but do you have any of these left and the organization said we absolutely do oh yeah so there are things away yeah exactly you know tucked in a warehouse somewhere there are about five thousand uh original bricks wow in the chimney stack they were added up into the upper pieces of the chimney stack
37:04.059 --> 37:16.809
So everything on ground level in the house is up to current fire code so that we can use those fireplaces and really make the house an immersive experience for both our visitors as well as any living historians who come to participate.
37:17.850 --> 37:25.475
But then that upper section of the stack is original to the 18th century, which is a really fabulous detail we'd love to talk about.
37:25.596 --> 37:28.037
So thank you so much, Sarah.
37:28.077 --> 37:31.340
Sarah Vedrani, who is involved in many things in New Hampshire.
37:31.920 --> 37:32.821
Thank you for joining us.
37:33.101 --> 38:00.186
absolutely thank you so much for having me and yeah look forward to seeing what happens in portsmouth and in newcastle and at the paul wentworth house and finding out more about what's going on and getting people excited about history in new hampshire so thank you absolutely it's all about new hampshire it is yeah and thank you to jonathan lane our producer and our listeners you know sir you know we do actually have listeners all around the world and every week we like to thank them if you're in one of these places send jonathan lane an email
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Jay Lane at Revolution250.org.
38:02.726 --> 38:07.087
Also, if you have an idea for someone or some topic you'd like to have us talk about.
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So this week, I want to thank our listeners in Mende, which is in southern France.
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And I have some towns in Massachusetts, Revere, Newton, Quincy, Worcester, and Malden, as well as Mumbai, Steubenville, Ohio, and all places in between and beyond.
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Thank you for listening.
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And now we will be piped out on the road to Boston.