Senator Martha Fuller Clark

Senator Martha Fuller Clark Served as NH State Senator for District 21 / 2012-2020 (Durham, Lee, Madbury, Newfields, Newington, Newmarket, Portsmouth.) Retired December 2020

Since 2012 I have had the honor to represent communities, residents and businesses in the NH Senate from District 21 which includes the communities of Durham, Lee, Madbury, Newfields, Newington, Newmarket and Portsmouth. I am running again this year for reelection from this district to continue my work. Over the past 4 years, I have served the Senate Health and Human Services Committee. I am proud

of having successfully sponsored Farm to Plate legislation on behalf of the many farmers in my district. This past year I served on the Legislative Task Force on Opioids and worked in a bi-partisan manner to pass several bills that will aid in addressing the crisis. I am also thrilled to note my support for the successful passage of the bill to expand Medicaid ensuring that nearly 50,000 low income working men and women of New Hampshire will continue to receive health insurance for another two years. From 2004-2010, I served in the New Hampshire State Senate, representing District 24, which included before redistricting the communities of Greenland, Hampton, Hampton falls, New Castle, Newinginton, North Hampton, Portsmouth, and Rye. During that time I served as Chair of the Senate Energy, Environment and Economic Development Committee and as a member of the Senate Education, Health, Transportation and Executive Department and Administration Committees. I was elected President Pro Tems for the 2009-10 term. Before that I served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives from 1990-2002 where I was a member of the Commerce Committee for ten years and a member of the House Democratic leadership team for six years. During that time, I am most proud of having successfully sponsored legislation that created both the Moose plate and the Land and Community Heritage Investment Program (LCHIP). I also serve as Vice Chair of the NH Democratic Party and as a member of the Democratic National Committee. In 2008, I co-chaired the NH Committee to Elect Barack Obama as President and was a member of the NH steering committee to re-elect Obama in 2012. Additionally I serve as past President on the Board of Trustees of Strawbery Banke Museum and as a member of the following state and local non-profit boards: The New Hampshire Women’s Foundation, the Jordan Institute and the Portsmouth Historical Society. I am a member and past President of the Board of Trustees Scenic America, a national organization dedicated to protecting visual and aesthetic quality of our country and also serve as an Advisor to the National Trust Historic Preservation. Previously I worked as a professional architectural historian and preservationist for 20 years, after receiving an MA from Boston University in 1977. I taught at both the secondary and college level (Boston University, the University of New Hampshire and the Park School in Brookline, Massachusetts). In the 1960’s, I worked as a lecturer in the Education Department’s Junior Museum at the Metropolitan Museum and as a picture researcher for TimeLife books. I have been married to Dr. Geoffrey E. Clark for 45 years. We have lived in Portsmouth since 1973. We are proud parents of three grown children, Caleb (Cabe). Nathaniel (Than), and Anna as well as the delighted grandparents of Scarlett Clark, Emerson, and Miles, children of Caleb Clark and Dr. Nicole Orr.

03/04/2026

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Maryland (WGME/WJLA) -- Police say an arrest has been made in the killing of Robert Fuller Jr., a Maine lawyer and philanthropist who was fatally shot at a senior living facility in Potomac, Maryland.

According to WJLA, police said they will "share details of the arrest of a suspect in connection with the shooting death" at a 3 p.m. press conference on Wednesday. Maryland State Police will also "discuss the connection between the Montgomery County homicide investigation and the suspect who shot at a trooper during a traffic stop."

WJLA reports police believe the suspect arrested in Fuller's death is also suspected of shooting at a Maryland State Trooper during an early morning traffic stop in Baltimore City early Tuesday morning.

Maurquise James, 22, was taken into custody Tuesday and faces charges of attempted first-degree murder, felony assault, using a firearm during a crime of violence, and related offenses, according to WBFF.

In the Baltimore incident, state police said shortly before 3:30 a.m., a trooper attempted a traffic stop and as he approached the vehicle, the driver opened his door slightly and opened fire. The trooper was not hit but was injured during the incident. The trooper suffered powder burns due to the close proximity of the shooting, according to investigators.

Suspect in killing of Robert Fuller Jr., a Maine lawyer and philanthropist, who{ }was shot to death at a senior living facility in Maryland. (Montgomery County police)
Suspect in killing of Robert Fuller Jr., a Maine lawyer and philanthropist, who{ }was shot to death at a senior living facility in Maryland. (Montgomery County police)

According to WJLA, when the suspect was identified in the traffic stop investigation, Maryland State Police and Montgomery County police realized they were looking for the same person.

Montgomery County police had developed the same man as the suspect in the death of Fuller after they released security video from the senior living facility earlier this week. The video shows a person who may have killed Fuller seen walking on the property of the Cogir Potomac Senior Living facility around the time of the killing on Feb. 14.

WJLA reports the suspect was an employee of the Cogir Senior Living facility where the murder happened.

In a bizarre twist, investigators discovered that the man was due in traffic court in Rockville on Tuesday, and a lookout had been posted. When the suspect appeared, he was arrested in front of the courthouse.

The 87-year-old was found dead with a gunshot wound to the head inside his apartment at the facility along Potomac Tennis Lane. Police have not said whether Fuller was targeted.

Fuller was known for his philanthropy after donating $1.64 million to upgrade a high school’s athletic field in Maine. He was also the descendant of the chief justice of the Supreme Court, Melvin Fuller.

03/04/2026

As promised, here is the obituary for Robert G. Fuller, Jr

POTOMAC, Md. – Robert Gorham Fuller Jr., a retired lawyer residing in Potomac, Md., and formerly of Winthrop, died on Feb. 14, 2026, at Cogir Senior Living Facility of Potomac, Md. He was born in Boston, Mass. on Dec. 28, 1938, the oldest son of the late Robert G. Fuller and Constance B. Fuller.

After completing his secondary education at Milton Academy in Massachusetts, Fuller graduated from Princeton University in 1961, and the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1964. He practiced law briefly in southern Maine before returning to Augusta, where the Fuller family had resided for several generations. One Augusta ancestor was Henry Weld Fuller Jr., who built the residence in Augusta now occupied by the Kennebec Historical Society. He was also related to Brig. Gen. Seth Williams, a Civil War officer who served on the staff of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant; Melville Weston Fuller, who was the chief justice of the United States from 1888 to 1910; and Daniel Cony, the father of public education in Augusta and for whom Cony High School is named.

Mr. Fuller was an assistant attorney general in Maine from 1968 to 1970. He left public service to start his own law firm and later joined the Augusta office of Pierce Atwood LLP, from which he retired in 1991. Mr. Fuller turned to managing family investments with his late father, who died in 2010. His many interests turned to philanthropy. He gave generously to many Maine charitable organizations and institutions, often with no desire for recognition. In Augusta, he was a major donor to Howard Hill Historical Park and provided the funds for the veterans’ study area and lounge at the University of Maine at Augusta. He helped to build a shelter for women veterans, the Sisters in Arms Center on Summer Street. A family foundation he headed funded the children’s reading room at Lithgow Public Library and he personally funded the rehabilitation section at MaineGeneral Medical Center’s Alfond Center for Health in honor of his wife of 23 years, Moira Hastings Fuller, in 2015. The foyer of the Kennebec Valley YMCA is also named in honor of Mr. Fuller and his (late) wife.

Mr. Fuller also endowed a professorship at the University of Pennsylvania law school that bears his name. He and other family members have supported both the Benjamin A.G. Fuller and Harriet Williams Fuller Fund and the Horace Williams Fund, established by Fuller family members and relatives in the 19th-century to assist and support worthy and deserving college-bound students from Augusta. The statue of Daniel Cony in the lobby of Cony High School and the statue of Melville Weston Fuller that stood for several years in Augusta were both given by Mr. Fuller. He donated most of the funds to resurface the multi-sport athletic field at Cony High School, now named “Fuller Field.” He became a major donor to the Friends of the Erben Organ in New York City, N.Y. and was most recently involved in supporting academic and private organizations promoting ethical and critical thinking, which he believed to be the foundation of good character and a civil society.

Mr. Fuller spoke fluent French and had many friends among Augusta’s Franco-American community. Le Club Calumet gave him its Augusta’s 2021 Citizen of the Year award.

After serving briefly as an enlisted Marine, Fuller became a reserve officer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps of the United States Navy. He commanded two reserve units and retired with the rank of Captain.

Mr. Fuller was a serious outdoorsman. Before, as he put it, “the warranty on my knees expired,” he often overnight-hiked portions of the Appalachian Trail in New Hampshire and Maine. He explored the foothills of the Atlas Mountains and hiked through the Cotswold countryside in England, and in Iceland. He climbed Mount Katahdin, which he said every good Mainer fit to do so should do.

Mr. Fuller was a stalwart member of the Winthrop Lions Club. He was named Lion of the Year, received the President’s Service Award, and was selected as a Melvin Jones Fellow.

Additionally, he was a serious writer. He published a crime novel set in Maine, “Unnatural Deaths” as well as a graphic short story, “Flashback Morning,” that was included in the Milspeak Foundation anthology of the best military-themed short stories published in 1999. His piece “The Christmas Contract” appeared in the Maine Bar Association Journal. Recently, he provided the research for a comprehensive biography of Melville Weston Fuller, entitled “Calm Command”, written by historian and author Douglas Rooks, and published in 2024.

Universally admired for his intelligence, fair-mindedness, and indefatigable spirit, Fuller’s commitment to family, community, and country guided his conscience and can best be summed up by his inscription on the plinth of the Melville Weston Fuller statue: Justice is the guardian of liberty.

Mr. Fuller relocated to the Cogir Senior Living Facility in 2024 to an apartment he jokingly referred to as “Wits’ End.” Life-long friend, Linda L. Buttrick, joined him and together they enjoyed the care and companionship of many helpers, family, and friends who are now bereft of ‘The Captain.’

Mr. Fuller is survived and sorely missed by Linda and her children, Suzanne Caron of Augusta, and Jonathan Buttrick of Woonsocket, R,I.; several stepchildren from his prior marriage, including Diane Hastings and her husband, Frank Panopoulos, Esq., of Potomac, Md., Linda Frost and her husband, Clifford, Winthrop, Thomas Hastings and his wife, Karen, of Rochester, N.H.; as well as seven step-grandchildren. He is also survived by a younger brother, Randolph J. Fuller, of Boston, Mass.; six Fuller cousins; and several extended Fuller family nephews and nieces.

Due to the profound impact that Fuller has made on the lives of so many, he will be honored in both Maryland and Maine. A celebration of life will be held at the church at St. James’s Episcopal Church in Potomac, Md. on April 29 at 10:30 am. A graveside service will be held in Augusta in early June followed by a reception for all who knew and loved him. The date and time will be announced through the funeral home website at a later date.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Plummer Funeral Home, 16 Pleasant St., Augusta.

Condolences, stories, and photos may be shared at http://www.plummerfh.com.

12/12/2025

Prince Louis is known for his cheeky antics in public - and his parents have a special approach to keeping him in check without a public reprimand that dif

10/23/2025

This custard recipe uses simple ingredients and a no-frill method to make the perfect batch of belly-warming baked custard.

Every home baker needs a go-to baked custard recipe in their back pocket. It’s the perfect dessert to whip up on a rainy day, when a loved one is sick or when you’re craving a dessert but have almost no ingredients in the house. Homemade custard is warm, creamy, cozy and so soul-affirming that it’s basically the dessert equivalent of chicken noodle soup.

But how do you make custard? We’ll show you that it is really quite simple. Once you master this recipe for custard, you’ll open a whole new door to tons of delicious custard recipes. A blackberry and creamy corn custard is a must in the summertime, while our pumpkin spice custard is autumn in a ramekin. | Get the recipe at the link in the comments ⬇️

02/26/2025

Long shelf life foods are pantry staples. Keep these on hand for years (or even decades!).

09/28/2024

Mabel May Woodward (American painter) 1877 - 1945
Still Life - Begonia and Figurines, s.d.
oil on canvas mounted to board
33.02 x 25.4 cm. (13 x 10 in.)
signed lower left: M. Woodward
private collection
© photo Vose Galleries

Catalogue Note Vose Galleries
In addition to landscapes and coastal scenes painted throughout New England and her many travel destinations, Woodward was a talented still life artist, applying her eye for composition and strong color palette to charming arrangements, such as Still Life – Begonia and Figurines.

* * *

Mabel May Woodward spent her entire professional career in and around the Providence, Rhode Island and summered in Ogunquit and Gloucester and beaches and landscapes and harbors with Anne Carleton, Jane Peterson, Gertrude Fiske, Bessie Wessel, Charles Woodbury and other Ogunquit and Gloucester painters. She also painted during the 20s and 30s in Charleston when it was experiencing a cultural renaissance and was a popular destination for tourists. She is best known for her quickly executed impressionistic brushwork and for utilizing spontaneously a light, bright palette and her most desirable paintings depict figures at the beach.
Woodward's estate was purchased by the Shein family of R.I. in 1970 and the Vose Galleries of Boston in 1971 gave her a one-woman show. Other solo exhibitions were held at the Providence Art Club (1939); El Paso Museum of Art (1972), Texas; Chicago Art Institute; Providence Water Color Club and other locales.
Woodward was born in Providence in 1877 and graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1896; the Art Student's League (NY) with William M. Chase, Frank Vincent DuMond (with whom she painted in Old Lyme, CT), Kenyon Cox, Arthur Dow and George Bridgman; and with Charles Woodbury at the Woodbury Ogunquit School (Maine). At the Ogunquit School she became a close friend of fellow student Anne Carleton and together they painted the shoreline and beaches in and around Ogunquit. In 1900, she returned to Rhode Island where she taught painting at the RH School of Design for many years (often quoting DuMond), where she developed the "The Action Class" (painting moving figures, not static figures). During summer months she often traveled to France, Italy and Holland to paint and she painted street scenes in Provincetown, MA.
Woodward was a member of the Providence Art Club; Providence Water Color Club; South County Art Association and the Ogunquit Art Association. She won a gold medal in 1908 at the Art Institute of Boston. Her work was included in the exhibition "Charles Woodbury and his students" at the Ogunquit Art Museum (1998). Her work is represented at RISD Museum and the Providence Art Club (past president) and taught painting at RISD.

Source: Pierce Galleries

09/27/2024
01/28/2024

The discovery of the world’s earliest pyramids on the Kola Peninsula may confirm the existence of an ancient civilisation on Russian territory. The discovery of the world’s earliest pyramids on the Kola Peninsula may confirm the existence of an ancient civilisation on Russian territory. The civi...

11/17/2023
11/17/2023

⭐ Happy birthday Master Claude Monet ⭐ Claude Monet - Mia Feigelson Gallery

'What keeps my heart awake is colourful silence.'

'Colour is my daylong obsession, joy, and torment.'

'The richness I achieve comes from nature, the source of my inspiration.'

'I would like to paint the way a bird sings.'

'Nothing in the whole world is of interest to me but my painting and my flowers.'

'It seems to me, when I see nature, that I see it ready made, completely written — but then, try to do it! All this proves that one must think of nothing but impressions; it is by dint of observation and reflection that one makes discoveries.'

'For me, a landscape does not exist in its own right, since its appearance changes at every moment; but the surrounding atmosphere brings it to life - the air and the light which vary continually. For me, it is only the, surrounding atmosphere which gives subjects their true value.'

'My only merit lies in having painted directly in front of nature, seeking to render my impressions of the most fleeting effects, and I still very much regret having caused the naming of a group whose majority had nothing impressionist about it.' ― Claude Monet

"Self-Portrait with a Beret", 1886
By Claude Monet (French, 1840-1926)
oil on canvas; 46 x 56 cm (18.1 x 22 in.)
Private Collection

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