New Hampshire
The mostly white, male faces of the N.H. State House walls
This story was initially produced by the New Hampshire Bulletin, an unbiased native newsroom that enables NHPR and different information retailers to republish its reporting.
Some look you sternly within the eyes. Others gaze off into an undefined distance. Alongside the partitions of the State Home cling portraits to commemorate people with ties to the state. The overwhelming majority of them are white males.
Of the 213 portraits within the State Home, 9 are ladies, mentioned Virginia Drew, director of the State Home Customer Heart. Drew doesn’t know of a single portrait of an individual of coloration on the partitions, and, she mentioned, “I do know each portray.”
A legislative effort would have modified that, including a portrait of Wentworth Cheswill, a Newmarket resident thought-about to be the primary African American elected to public workplace within the nation when he turned a city constable in 1768. However negotiations on Home Invoice 1586 broke down when lawmakers couldn’t agree on the suitable medium to commemorate Cheswill (typically spelled Cheswell).
As a result of there’s no {photograph} or portray depicting Cheswill, Senate lawmakers argued that making a fictional picture of him could be a dangerous racial fantasy and pushed as a substitute for a commemorative plaque. However the Home held agency on its place, with lawmakers chatting with the significance of visually representing the state’s diversifying inhabitants. A plaque, they mentioned, could be insufficient.
Learn extra: In Newmarket, calls to place up statue of Black Revolutionary Struggle hero Wentworth Cheswill
“As an individual of coloration, I stroll round these halls, and I see no one that appears like me. I don’t know if there’ll ever be a portrait of someone who seems like me,” mentioned Rep. Manny Espitia, a Nashua Democrat, in a negotiating session on the invoice. Espitia identifies as Chicano, somebody of Mexican descent who was born within the U.S. He described the enjoyment of chatting with college students from the district he represents in Spanish after they go to the State Home.
“I fear in regards to the optics of a plaque versus a portrait… not elevating it to the extent of stature of a portrait,” Espitia mentioned.
Due to the divide, neither choice will advance for now.
That is despite bipartisan settlement from each chambers that commemorating Cheswill was worthwhile.
Cheswill is understood for quite a few different historic contributions: He rode alongside Paul Revere and fought within the Revolutionary Struggle. After he was first elected, he continued serving his hometown of Newmarket for all however one 12 months of his life, working as a constable, instructor, justice of the peace, and selectman. He’s thought-about to be New Hampshire’s first archeologist by the New England Historic Society.
Cheswill’s grandfather Richard Cheswill was a previously enslaved one who went on to purchase his freedom and buy 20 acres of land in Newmarket. As a result of each Cheswill’s grandmother and mom have been white ladies, he too was counted as white within the census, despite his biracial ancestry.
His combined heritage was the subject of debate within the Legislature this 12 months, as lawmakers grappled with the way to painting him with out an present picture.
“What we learn about Cheswill is that he had combined heritage. And we don’t know: Was he gentle skinned? Did he have straight or curly hair? What have been his options?” mentioned Sen. David Watters, a Dover Democrat, throughout negotiations on the invoice. “We all know none of this, and for that motive it was feared that no matter portrait was created could be an invention.”
Watters gave a private instance of his son, who’s African American, seeing “fantasized photographs” of glad slaves on the wall of the schoolhouse in fourth grade. “In lots of circumstances, over a few years, individuals’s imagined concepts of African People have been very problematic,” he mentioned.
He additionally pointed to the portrait lately commissioned by the Vermont Legislature of Alexander Twilight, believed to be the primary African American legislator within the U.S. “You’re a quote unquote white man,” Watters mentioned, of the portrait.
A plaque, Watters argued, would commemorate Cheswill with out making a false picture. Watters mentioned he consulted with the Black Heritage Path of New Hampshire, and the group agreed that presenting an invented picture could be “troubling.”
However Home lawmakers disagreed, citing issues in regards to the impression that may make on the college youngsters who go to the State Home.
“We’ve got extra range coming into the State Home now with all totally different nationalities, together with Black, combined race, all the gamut, and wouldn’t it fantastic for these youngsters to determine with somebody that’s combined race slightly than a plaque and never understanding that this individual is maybe like them?” mentioned Rep. Claire Rouillard, a Goffstown Republican.
In his lifetime, Cheswill was a Freemason, and the group was prepared to fund the portrait, Paul Smith informed the Home committee on Legislative Administration in January. Smith, too, is a Freemason, along with his work because the clerk of the Home. (He informed lawmakers he was testifying a person, and never in his official capability.)
The artist chosen by the Freemasons, Ryan Flynn, lately accomplished the same portrait utilizing interval documentation. Cheswill’s descendants would have been taken under consideration when making a likeness of him.
Lawmakers who supported a portrait identified that inventive liberties have been taken with different portraits, like that of Marilla Ricker, who turned the primary feminine legal professional within the state in 1890.
“I discussed to the artist that from the images now we have of her, the picture appeared fairly totally different,” Rouillard mentioned. “And she or he mentioned, ‘Properly, Marilla Ricker seems very extreme.’ She thought she’d take inventive license and soften it.”
The portraits hanging within the State Home symbolize individuals who have ties to New Hampshire, some extra tenuous than others. Some connections are apparent: There’s a corridor containing portraits of previous governors. The primary feminine govt councilor, Dudley Dudley, is on the second flooring.
Most of the early portraits have been acquired by the Legislature as a result of a household with the means to fee them gave them to the state as a present, in line with Drew.
“I name this the hallway of randomness,” she mentioned, describing a again hallway on the primary flooring.
She pointed to the portrait of one other white man: Zachariah Chandler, the primary mayor of Detroit and an early governor of Michigan. His New Hampshire connection? He was born and raised right here.
New Hampshire Bulletin is a part of States Newsroom, a community of reports bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. New Hampshire Bulletin maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Dana Wormald for questions: information@newhampshirebulletin.com. Comply with New Hampshire Bulletin on Fb and Twitter.
New Hampshire
Crash impacts traffic on I-95 northbound in NH
New Hampshire State Police responded to a crash Friday evening on Interstate 95 northbound in Portsmouth.
The crash happened near Exit 5 and closed the highway in the northbound direction, but police said around 7:45 p.m. that one lane had reopened.
Authorities did not have any word on injuries.
Drivers are being asked to avoid the area if possible. Delays and detours are expected.
No further details were immediately available.
New Hampshire
NH Butterfly Monitoring Network Offers Online Trainings
CONTACT:
Heidi Holman, NH Fish and Game: 603-271-2461
Haley Andreozzi, UNH Cooperative Extension: (603) 862-5327
January 10, 2025
Concord, NH — Butterflies serve as important biodiversity indicators for ecosystem health and provide food for many speciess, such as migrating birds. There are more than 100 typess of butterflies in New Hampshire, but data on their presence and distribution is limited. With butterflies using forests, fields, wetlands, and backyards all over the state, volunteer observations are critical to providing a landscape view of these species.
A five-part online training series hosted by the NH Butterfly Monitoring Network will provide information on butterflies in New Hampshire, butterfly biology and identification, and how to get involved with the Network. The NH Butterfly Monitoring Network is a collaborative effort with a goal of engaging volunteers in counting and identifying butterflies across New Hampshire. Data collected by volunteers can contribute to the understanding of long-term trends in butterfly populations and inform conservation actions for both common and declining species.
Webinars in the series will include:
February 12, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Intro to New Hampshire Butterflies
Mark Ellingwood, Wildlife Biologist and Volunteer with the Harris Center for Conservation Education
February 26, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Wetland Butterflies of New Hampshire
Rick Van de Poll, Ecologist and Certified Wetland Scientist
March 12, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Butterflying New Hampshire’s Woodlands
Levi Burford, Coordinator of the Errol Butterfly Count
March 26, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Identifying New Hampshire’s Grassland Butterflies
Amy Highstrom, Coordinator of the Lake Sunapee Butterfly Count, and Vanessa Johnson, NH Audubon
April 9, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Become a Volunteer Guide with NH Butterfly Monitoring Network
Haley Andreozzi, UNH Extension
All butterfly enthusiasts are welcome, with or without prior experience. For more information and to register for the session(s) you are interested in, visit nhbutterflies.org.
The NH Butterfly Monitoring Network is led by the NH Fish and Game Department and UNH Cooperative Extension with collaboration from partners statewide, including NH Audubon, Tin Mountain Conservation Center, the Harris Center for Conservation Education, and Ausbon Sargent Land Preservation Trust.
New Hampshire
Cooper scores 20, UAlbany beats New Hampshire
Posted:
Updated:
ALBANY, NY (NEWS10) — A strong second half powered the UAlbany women’s basketball team to their third conference victory in as many contests on Thursday night.
COACH COLLEEN MULLEN: “To start the game, New Hampshire had great defensive intensity and pace. Once we settled in and started moving the ball, we were able to capitalize with our inside-out game. In the second half, we had solid offensive execution and grinded out multiple defensive stops. This was a great team win on both ends.”
KEY STATS
- Graduate student Kayla Cooper led the team with 20 points, six rebounds, three steals, and three assists while shooting over 50% from the field.
- Fellow graduate student Jessica Tomasetti followed with nine points and five rebounds. The point guard also shot 50% from the field.
- Junior Gabriela Falcao tallied a team-high two blocks.
- As a team, the Great Danes totaled nine steals with 19 points off turnovers.
- The UAlbany defense did not allow any singular Wildcat to surpass seven points.
HOW IT HAPPENED
- Graduate student Lilly Phillips scored the first basket of the game after a combined four scoreless possessions.
- That defensive nature continued throughout the rest of the half.
- New Hampshire gained a 9-5 lead within four minutes of action but the Great Danes quickly answered to tie the score in the next two minutes.
- UAlbany ended the quarter with a one-possession advantage, 14-11.
- Throughout the second quarter, the Great Danes allowed just two field goals for five Wildcat points.
- Four different Great Danes scored in a defensive quarter to make it a 24-16 game at halftime.
- The second half was a different game – UAlbany nearly doubled its score from the first half in the third quarter alone.
- The Great Danes began the third with a 12-2 scoring run. Ten of those points were scored in just two minutes and 23 seconds.
- Kayla Cooper and Jessica Tomasetti combined to score 10 additional points and close the third quarter with a 22-point advantage, 46-24.
- Cooper and Tomasetti scored all but three of the 22 points in the third quarter. Cooper tallied 12 alone.
- Following two fourth-quarter layups from senior Laycee Drake and Phillips, the Great Danes held a 26-point lead.
- UAlbany continued to extend their lead throughout the next seven minutes of action. The largest lead of the contest came with 1:24 left – 29 points (59-30).
- The Wildcats got the final say to make it a 27-point decision, 59-32.
NEXT: The Great Danes will close out the week at home against Maine on Saturday (Jan. 11).
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