A pictoral history and moving tribute to the people of Portland's
spirit, drive and ability to overcome adversity from the last 130
years.
Portland is often associated with the mythological phoenix, the animal
that rises out of the ashes of its apparent death. Life here has often
been a struggle: to overcome the disastrous fires of 1775 and 1866, to
rebuild after the change in Canadian policy in 1920 that devastated the
waterfront and to outlast the Depression and the other economic crises
that have affected the area. The people of Portland have always faced
these problems head on, survived, and rebuilt the city stronger then it
was before.
Portland features more than 200 images that together document life in
Maine's largest city over the last 130 years. We see immigrants arrive
from all corners of the world and watch as they build lives and
businesses in their new home. We witness the waterfront and Congress
Street rise, fall, and rise again. We observe how the political scene
has changed and been changed by everyday people. Perhaps the most
interesting photographs, however, are those of everyday life: people
working, playing sports, relaxing, falling in love and living life to
its fullest.