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Portland, Maine Middle Street 1846 Postcard

Qty:
Signature Matte
18 pt thickness / 120 lb weight Soft white, soft eggshell texture
-$0.50

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Size: Standard Postcard

Create your own vacation-worthy postcard! Any view you’ve seen, any monument you’ve fallen in love with, can all be added to your postcard with our personalisation tool.

  • Dimensions: 14.22 cm L x 10.79 cm H; qualified USPS postcard size
  • High quality, full-colour, full-bleed printing on both sides

Paper Type: Signature Matte

Our Signature Matte paper is a customer favorite—smooth to the touch with a soft eggshell texture that elevates any design. Its sturdy 18 pt weight and natural feel make it the ideal choice for timeless, sophisticated events.

  • Exclusively made for Zazzle
  • Made and Printed in the USA
  • FSC® Certified—sourced from responsibly managed forests that protect both people and planet

About This Design

Portland, Maine Middle Street 1846 Postcard

Portland, Maine Middle Street 1846 Postcard

Middle Street, looking east in 1846 by George M Howe. The Merchant's Exchange - with the Pantheon dome - was between Court (now Exchange) and Lime (now Market) Streets, built 1835-39 at a cost of $100,000 by the city of Portland in hopes of luring the Legislature back from the wilderness town of Augusta. Built of syenite granite from Kennebunk, it was 3 stories with a very low hipped roof, 136 feet long, 72 feet wide, and had a 63 feet diameter dome that was 25 feet high. It had a 26 feet high monolithic octastyle portico above the ground floor. Richard Bond was the architect. In 1849, the Merchant's Exchange was sold by the City of Portland to the United States for $149,000 for use as a Custom House, Post Office and US Court House. It was destroyed by fire January 8, 1854, and replaced at the same location. It is now the location of Post Office Park. The church in the distance was the Second Parish Meetinghouse on the corner with Deer Street, built in 1788; the first pastor was Elijah Kellogg, and the city's first church organ was installed here in 1798. The church burned in the 1866 fire, and a new one was built on the corner of Congress and Pearl Streets.

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5 stars rating15.8K Total Reviews
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Other Info

Product ID: 239958063857226705
Added on 10/11/12, 7:39 am
Rating: G