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Honor Your Family with a Work of Art Tony Tirabassi Memorial Counselor Cemetery Cremation Memorials since 1919 220 Main Street South Portland Route 1 Across from Calvary Cemetery next to Handyman Rental 767-2233 www.mainememorial.com Mon.-Fri. 830am to 400pm Saturday 830am - noon Evenings Sundays by appointment Maine Memorial Co. Quality Maine Craftsmanship Paul DiMatteo Maines only Certified Memorialist With over 93 years experience our monuments and markers are affordable locally designed and carved using only the highest quality granite. PORTLANDSTAGE where great theater lives BUY TICKETS 207.774.0465www.portlandstage.org 25A Forest Ave Portland Maine A pr i l 2 0 1 6 7 3 wealthy. As fashion moved west toward Bramhall and the Promenade citizens of solid if modest means took up lodging in the row but the whole idea of such connect- ed brick homes vanished until our time. Here again is a curious deferral of dreams. As Patricia Anderson observes in the book Portland 1972 It is safe to say that todays renascence of this handsome row is much closer to the vision of the Park Street Pro- prietors in 1835 than actuality in 1838. Today overarching trees line the thorough- fare which was virtually without shade in the 1970s. A nd what of the people in Horaces operetta Certainly they would in- clude Dr. Alfred Brinkler music teacher and organist at St. Lukes who was the second owner of his unit from 1906 to the 1970s. It was he who installed a massive Hope James pipe organ in the townhouse he sold to Peter and Pam Plumb. The latter was Mayor and saw the city adopt its first historic preservation ordinance. Or renter Bill Frost who was playing his guitar when Horace knocked on the door saying Ive come to complain about the music. Ill play softer said the musician. No louder said the landlord. Either you keep the door open or come down. We can hard- ly hear you. In the 1990s John Preston author of Winters Light chosen as one of 100 books that best revealed the history of the State took up residence. The New York Times Book Review noted The first hero in the fine col- lection of essays is Portland a small city where John Preston finally found a commu- nity quirky enough to encompass himself. Let the Row keep drawing the originals and may its song be sung. n William David Barry is the author of Maine The Wilder Half of New England.He is a reference historian at the Maine Historical Society. 1962