113 West Commercial Street | VA Outpatient Clinic | Portland

I'm pretty sure @Portlander is right. It used to be on the Portland Yacht Services property when it was on the East End, so it makes sense if it's been moved.

PYS's blue-blooded owner claims that Cleeve is a distant ancestor and wants the city to accept it into its public art collection. The city is uninterested in yet another statue of an old white guy, especially one who may, as some histories suggest, have owned a slave at some point.

It's also not really clear what Cleeve's real role in "founding" Portland was – there's a good overview of the debate in this old 2002 Press Herald story, which was cross-posted to a historians' discussion group:
https://lists.h-net.org/cgi-bin/log...2&week=a&msg=X0nb7Kv1yCEh7V3yNIvr8Q&user=&pw=
 
This peeves me. For YEARS the city ignored the Abyssinian House, letting it fall into disrepair (I've donated money to this cause as it's such an important part of Portland's history). And so George Cleeve is the founder of Portland, and he is ignored? He died in 1666, well before slavery appeared, as there were very few colonists around. This statue needs to be front and center. All of these figures need to be put into the proper context. If not, you get a watered down and inaccurate history, of which is a lie. That's simply fear.
 
@TC_zoid There was absolutely lots of slavery happening in the colonies, including Massachusetts/Maine, in the 1500s and 1600s. People usually cite 1619 as the year the African slave trade started, but well before that, there was a lot of enslavement of local Native Americans. So it's definitely possible that Cleeve, as a landowner, would have taken advantage.

There are two issues w/r/t this particular sculpture:
  • It's a huge stretch to say that Cleeve "founded" the city – that's really more of a myth that's being promoted out of the vanity of his ancestors;
  • But also, that this particular statue is pretty ugly, and nobody wants to look at it.
 
Incidentally, there is an official memorial to George Cleeve and his partner Richard Tucker; it's the obelisk on the Eastern Prom at the beginning of Congress St.
 
Agree 110% on the unsightly power lines. A few years ago I needed to take a pic of the Victoria Mansion on Danforth, and I could not do it without including the power lines. Perhaps a fish eye lens standing up close is the only way. It's one of the most interesting buildings in Portland and every picture taken of it has to have those ugly power lines spread across--unless you clean it up in Photoshop. Imagine ugly power lines in front of every picture of Portland Head Light.
 
Just dumping a few photos of the completed project.

Was hoping there would be a connection up to the West End through here...
VA Outpatient Clinic by Corey Templeton, on Flickr

Inspiring streetscape (the off-road path is nice though)

VA Outpatient Clinic by Corey Templeton, on Flickr

VA Outpatient Clinic by Corey Templeton, on Flickr

Massive parking lot in addition to the huge garage:
VA Outpatient Clinic by Corey Templeton, on Flickr

Future connection to the path over to Veterans Bridge and Danforth Street:
VA Outpatient Clinic by Corey Templeton, on Flickr
 
Wow, I absolutely love the fresh, crisp new telephone poles. For awhile now I've been close to starting a Portland "poles & wires" thread, I think Portland needs to celebrate this type of craftsmanship. There are so many glorious examples of poles where the planning and delicate installation of defunct and new equipment and wires is perfectly balanced - you've got to make sure all the weight isn't on one side!
 
I also found myself in awe of the new power poles....I barely looked at the building!
 
Yes, Portland does ruin the appearance of a lot of nice buildings with its telephone poles in front (e.g., Victoria Mansion). But my main beef with the city is its laziness in cleaning up all the dirt left behind from winter droppings. Not only is it unsightly, it ruins the roadside and sidewalk grass by killing or burying it. A few years ago, a nice street on Munjoy Hill was neglected through the summer with substantial amounts of streetside dirt and dead leaves from the winter (and fall). How do residents not see this? In some Asian countries, residents come out daily with brooms and sweep and clean EVERTHING on or near their homes (Koreatown in LA too). If Portland cleaned up its streets and sidewalks properly, and planted more flowers, the difference would become dramatic.
 

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