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LobsterShirt.net Fine Cotton Polo Shirts with the Lobster Logo Hats Too www.coastalstudiesforgirls.org An Extraordinary 10th Grade Semester OPEN HOUSE April 10th from noon to 3pm 308 Wolfes Neck Road Freeport ME Current owners on the row according to Portlands online tax database include restau- rant impresario Dana Street gallerist June Fitzpatrick and former Portland mayor Pamela Plumb and attorney husband Peter Plumb. City Beat 72 p o r t l a n d monthly magazine LibraryofCongressgerdaPeteriCh End. In that spring City Manager John E. Menario told local businessmen that GPL was rushing in to have condemned struc- tures marked historic not so much for his- toric interestbut to block renewal. GPLspresidentCharltonS.Smithemphat- ically denied any plans to block progress. We simply wish to have a voice in the redevelop- ment process at a time when there is still a chancetoexplorealternativestothedemolish- ment of historically valuable buildings. Here was a firm statement of creative reuse pre- serving an irreplaceable destination spot rath- erthangivewaytoagroupofblandnewbuild- ingstodrivearoundorthrough.Afteryearsof wrangling this would subsequently lead to more cooperation of citizens business histor- ic preservation and government. Today a dreary intersection between the Little Tap House restaurant and a green- space parking lot marks the end of the cross- peninsula arterial dream and the start of architectural preservation and livability in the West End the future washing up on the doorstep of Park Row. But dreams are curious things. Some- times they end up deferred. In the mid-1830s art critic John Neal brought the notion of townhouses built in rows to Portland. Neal built a duplex on State Street intending to include more units but was preempted by the Ann Street Com- pany Park Street Proprietary who snagged his potential investors. The investors paid 15000 for Billy Grays Rope Walk between Congress and Gray streets and lofted an elegant row of townhouses on newly named Park Street. However the national panic of 1837 bank- rupted the investors and the units were sold at auction. Though interiors and trim were left to individual owners and all were sold by 1838 some were used for storage of hay and other material. The vertical four- and five-story complex never appealed to the