Portsmouth Self-Guided Tour

Today’s downtown includes sites of the earliest urban settlement, the waterfront, homes of the early merchants, and, consequently, the earliest enslavements. Enslavement of Africans was part of Portsmouth life by 1645, although the first records of Portsmouth merchants participating in the slave trade were in the 1680s, with captives mostly male children and adolescents sold directly from ship or dockside near the area where Prescott Park is now. A 1775 census reported 656 enslaved Africans in New Hampshire, mostly in Portsmouth and adjacent towns. Since colonial times, Portsmouth’s population has remained 2 to 4 percent Black.

Downtown Portsmouth Map
(← click image for larger map)

Download a printable PDF of the Downtown Portsmouth Map and Site Key to 24 sites
(2 page PDF, printable on 2 pages of letter-size paper)

BUY THE BOOK!

  • Softcover, 7x10, 64 full color pages
  • 37 historic sites described in detail
  • Over 100 full color photos
  • Street maps and key to sites
  • $14.95 plus shipping

Downtown Portsmouth Map key:

  1. **Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire office, 222 Court St.
  2. Governor John Langdon House, 143 Pleasant St.
  3. William Pitt Tavern, 416 Court St., Strawbery Banke Museum
  4. * **Docks & view of Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Prescott Park
  5. Sherburne House, Strawbery Banke campus
  6. South Meeting House, 280 Marcy St.
  7. *NH Gazette, corner of Howard & Washington Streets [private]
  8. **Cooper House & Beauty Shop, 171 Washington St. [private]
  9. Stoodley’s Tavern, 14 Hancock St., Strawbery Banke Museum
  10. Penhallow House, 93 Washington St., Strawbery Banke Museum
  11. **Warner House, 150 Daniel St.
  12. Saint John’s Church, 100 Chapel St.
  13. Waterfront, Ceres Street
  14. Moffatt-Ladd House, 154 Market St.
  15. *Black Whipple House, 127 High St. [private]
  16. Meeting Rooms, 14-16 Market Square, corner of Daniel & Pleasant Streets
  17. * **Town Pump and Stocks, next to North Church
  18.  North Church, Market Square
  19. * **Pomp & Candace Spring House & Bakery, Church Street
  20. *The Music Hall (The Temple ), Chestnut Street at Congress Street
  21. **John Paul Jones House, 43 Middle St.
  22. Rockingham House, 401 State St. [private]
  23. African Burying Ground, Chestnut Street, between Court & State Streets
  24. South Church, 292 State St.

* The original structure no longer exists
** No descriptive plaque


Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire

The Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire promotes awareness and appreciation of African American history and life in order to build more inclusive communities today.

Contact Info

Mail: 222 Court Street, Portsmouth NH 03801
Phone: 603-570-8469
Email: info@blackheritagetrailnh.org
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Office Hours:
M - F 10 - 4 pm

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