Monument Square (Portland, Maine) Explained

Monument Square
Coordinates:43.6573°N -70.2589°W
Maint:City of Portland
Location:Portland, Maine, U.S.

Monument Square (formerly Market Square[1] or Haymarket Square)[2] is a town square in downtown Portland, Maine, about halfway between the East Bayside and Old Port neighborhoods. The Time and Temperature Building, Fidelity Trust Building, and the main branch of the Portland Public Library are on Congress Street, across from the square, while One Monument Square and One City Center are among the buildings on the square itself.

Prior to 20th-century redevelopment, Middle Street originated from Market Square.[3] [4] It ran east through where The Maine Lobsterman statue is today, before continuing its current route from its intersection with Temple, Spring and Union Streets. The original stretch, which formerly met Federal Street in the square, is now paved with bricks and is no longer Middle Street.

Constituent buildings

One Monument Square is a ten-story office building on the eastern edge of the square,[5] located on the former site of the United States Hotel. The building opened after a ribbon-cutting ceremony in November 1970. Initial tenants included the law firms Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson and Pierce, Atwood, Scribner, Allen, Smith & Lancaster, as well as Amica Mutual Insurance.[6] It was significantly renovated in 2015.

28 Monument Square was built in 1871. In 2006, the first floor and basement of the building became the home of Public Market House, in which several vendors flank a narrow central corridor.[7] Some vendors relocated to Public Market House from the nearby Portland Public Market building, at the corner of Preble Street and Cumberland Avenue, which closed earlier the same year.[8] [9]

Old City Hall

See main article: Old City Hall (Portland, Maine).

In 1825, the Town of Portland built Market House in Market Square to facilitate the sale produce and livestock. In 1833, the structure was modified to serve as Portland's first city hall.[10] In 1862, it was replaced by a new city hall, located on Congress Street at the head of Exchange Street. The old city hall was demolished in 1888 and replaced by the Soldiers and Sailors Monument, at which time Market Square was renamed Monument Square.

Portland Soldiers and Sailors Monument

See main article: Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument (Portland, Maine). The Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument (also known as "Our Lady of Victories") stands in the center of Monument Square, on the former site of Portland's 1833 city hall.[11] Dedicated on October 28, 1891,[12] it honors "those brave men of Portland, soldiers of the United States Army and sailors of the Navy of the United States who died in defense of the country in the late civil war".[13] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 1, 1998.

See also

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Maine Register Or State Year-book and Legislative Manual from April 1 ... to April 1 ... . 1888 . J.B. Gregory . en.
  2. Web site: Hay Market Square, Portland, 1830 . 2024-03-11 . Maine Memory Network . en.
  3. Web site: Middle Street from Monument Square, Portland, ca. 1910 . 2024-03-11 . Maine Memory Network . en.
  4. Web site: Middle St. looking towards Monument Square, Portland, Me - Digital Collections - National Library of Medicine . 2024-03-11 . collections.nlm.nih.gov.
  5. Web site: One Monument Square, Portland - SkyscraperPage.com . skyscraperpage.com.
  6. News: November 21, 1970 . Ribbon Cutting . Evening Express.
  7. Web site: Public Market House . 2024-03-21 . Public Market House . en-US.
  8. https://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/11/realestate/11Real.html "Tied to a City, a Farmers' Market Proves Hardy"
  9. Web site: Portland Public Market . 2024-03-21 . Rudy Bruner Award . en-US.
  10. Book: Moon, John . Portland . 2009 . Arcadia Publishing . 978-0-7385-6517-0 . 11 . en.
  11. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=98000308}} NRHP nomination for Portland Soldiers and Sailors Monument ]. 2016-02-24 . National Park Service.
  12. News: A monument of malcontent?. Tobin. Michael. October 22, 2011. Portland Daily Sun. 22 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20120403093456/http://portlanddailysun.me/node/29507. 3 April 2012. dead.
  13. https://books.google.com/books?id=wzQ4AAAAIAAJ&dq=Portland+Soldiers+%26+Sailors+Monument&pg=PA263 Acts and resolves passed by the ... Legislature of the state of Maine