‘Save our Gym” Fundraising site aims to raiseย $50,000ย by March 12.

MANCHESTER, NHย โ Ten years ago Linda Murphy moved her boxing gym into an old abandoned armoryย on Lake Avenue. She and her now ex-husband sunk everything they owned into the project, taking out a home equity loan to renovate the neglected landmark.
Now, she’s fighting to remain in the building that is home to Murphy’s Bare Knuckle Fisticuffs, due to extenuating circumstances stemming from the couple’s 2011 divorce. Murphyย has until March 12 to turn things around and raise the $50,000 needed to settle up with her husband andย remain at theย Lake Avenue site, which otherwise will be listed for sale.
Go toย Murphy’s Bare Knuckle Fisticuffs ‘Donation for Services’ Pageย or Donate directly here via Crowdrise
ย Lake Avenue location was a perfect fit
After 25 years in business at aย few other locations around the city, Murphy says theyย finally found the perfect fit โย a scrappy, uplifting neighborhood where the everyday fight is real, a versatile space that reflected everything Murphy, a lifelong boxing coach, believed about what a community gym could be.
“We could make as much noise as we wanted without bothering other tenants, which is why we decided to leave our last location, at Langer Place โ which we loved,” she says.

Opening Bare Knuckle Murphyโs Fisticuffsย boxing gym on Lake Avenue, with its 20-foot-high ceilings, brick interior and wood floors, was a dream come true, says Murphy. It felt right, and the community has continued to show up.
The gym offersย USBA boxer training, martial arts and kickboxing instruction, as well as the newest addition, Go Ninja classes, which her two daughters have developed. Heather, 28, attended circus arts school, and Shaunna, 25, earned a degree in nutrition from UNH. The innovative program continues toย drawย hundreds of students โ male and female, young and old โ introducing them to a diverse set of skills designed to build strength and esteem.
The gym has established itself as a place of learning and excellence, most recently earning two New Hampshire Magazine “Best of 2014” accolades based on public voting.
Although business is thriving,ย she’s up against the ropes due to extenuating circumstances stemming fromย her divorce in 2011.
As part of the divorce settlement Murphy was supposed to sell the River Road home she and her ex-husband sharedย by the end of November 2014.
But it needed work, and she had her hands full with repairsย while continuing to manage her business full time.
“It’s an adorable bungalow from 1926, and has a lot of charm, but it was a bad time of year to sell a home, with the holidays and the snow storms,” says Murphy.
Her ex-husband wants his name off the property, and is ready to move on, she says.
Three years ago she went to Home Help NH, but at that time, with the real estate market reeling, she didnโt qualify for a loan on her own. Murphy hoped that with a little more time the market would begin to even out. Her home, valued at $255,000 10 years ago, is listed for justย $159,900.
But between the $100,000 drop in real estate value on their family homeย andย the $225,000 home equity loan they took for the business in 2005, she’s been unableย to get another loan in her name only.
Now she has until March 12 to turn things around and raise the final $50,000 needed to settle up with her ex-husband andย remain at theย Lake Avenue site, which otherwise will be listed for sale.
โI feel like Iโm in this fight, not just for me, but for so many people who love coming in here,โ says Murphy.
She was hopeful her home would have sold by now, but at this point, the only way she can stop the sale of the gym from under her is to raise the money herself.
Her support teamย has helped her rally by setting up an onlineย fundraiser.

By going toย the Murphy’sย “Save Our Gym” siteย people can sign up for classes, make donations to become sponsors and have their names affixed to the exterior of the building or on the gymโs website; send a kid to โNinjaโ summer camp; invest in โget toughโ workshops for employees; buy a front-row seat for open classes and professional sparringย matches.
So far she’s had an incredible outpouring of support from many of the thousands of students whoโve found a second-home at Murphyโs Gym over the years, and have sent in testimonies, some of which are featured on the website.
Murphy said she only wishes sheโd asked for help sooner.ย Until a few weeks ago, only those within her inner circle knew what she was really up against.
A place to buildย confidence, esteem
Kira Morehouse, who started bringing her 7-year-old daughter Sophia to the Go Ninja class last fall, said she knew Murphy was going through something, but only found out last week what is at stake.
Now sheโs all in and ready to lend her marketing services to the cause. Morehouse says Murphyโs gym has been pivotal in building up Sophiaโs esteem during what has been a challenging time in her daughterโs young life.
โI found Linda because of my involvement in TEDxAmoskeag Talks. Lindaโs daughters did an aerial performance there, and then I came to find out that Lindaโs sister, Donna Park, was Sophiaโs music teacher at Northwest Elementary. Thatโs how I learned about the Go Ninja class, and I just felt like it was a sign. Sophia had been in dance class, but for many different reasons, she needed something else,โ says Morehouse.

Go Ninja combines fitness through aerial circus arts, martial arts, music, and movement as a way to build esteem while providing practical skills that include mental toughness and agility.
โI really canโt say enough about what itโs meant to her โ and to me. I actually bring my 2-year-old along, and weโre all able to participate together,โ says Morehouse.
At a crucial time in her daughter’s development, where esteem issues start to creep up and can be compounded by the notorious โgirl clique,โ she says Sophiaย has had the opportunity to get into the ring and learn about sparring and jabbing. She found a kind of physical and emotional strength by climbing aerial silks. She’s learning to hit the heavy bags in the basement, Rocky-style, stretching, jumping rope, trying nunchucks and mastering obstacle course runs.
As Morehouse describes the empowerment Go Ninja has provided to her daughter during a recent late-night brainstorming session, Murphy listens, and the familiar sense of maternal emotion in Morehouse’s story gets the better of her.

“As a mother, I remember my children’s experience in activities at school. As a teacher I could see the times when people in places of authority were not intuitive enough to give encouragement, or control a negative person in a group. After years of doing workshops on bullying, I wanted to create a learningย environment free of those issues, for children and adults,” says Murphy.
โI wanted to create that place, for them and for other kids who needed a place where they could escape from the peer pressure, and just find some confidence ย — just find themselves,โ she says.
Melissa Desrosiers is an instructor at Murphyโs who came with a bachelor of art’sย in dance. She teaches โBad-ass Ballet” classes, and does aerial workshops. Her husband, Mike, their 14-year-old son Sam, and 16-year-old daughter, Abby, all attend classes at Murphyโs.
โLast week we put out a request on Facebook for testimonials from students,โ says Desrosiers, flipping through a pile of printed pages that continue to pour in.
โThereโs not one that doesnโt say they feel like Murphy’s is their second home. I know thatโs really important to me, to have a place like this where my whole family can come. We all know it takes just a little bit of discouragement in life to make or break a kid. What this place provides is invaluable,โ says Desrosiers.
And for Morehouse, the fact that Murphyโs students reflect the community in all its diversity, matters.
โWe come here and find all different kinds of people from all different walks of life. There are people from all economic and cultural backgrounds, and I love that about this place,โ Morehouse says.
โWe come because of the great energy inside. We come because of Linda, and what happens here. Itโs incredible,โ says Morehouse.
Murphy says sheโs learned a lot over these four years, much of it the hard way.
Overย those years, despite the struggle and pressure to sell her home, she was able to help her older daughter and her young family, who needed a place to stay temporarily during a rough patch, and then when her younger daughter, while a student at UNH, moved back home andย became a commuter student, afterย a science grant she had earned wasnโt renewed.
โThe house really had a purpose, to support the kids during that time. Iโve had setbacks. I know itโs important to settle all of this so we can all move on,โ says Murphy, who got an extension through the court, and was supposed to have sold the house by the end of November of 2014.
Murphy: Inspirational coach, fightingย spirit
She acknowledges that itโs not unreasonable for her ex-husband to want things settled. Through all the emotional and practical chaos that happens following a divorce, itโs taken Murphy, 56, longer than she expected to clear her head and get her legs back under her.

She’s financially down for the count, but not out. She’s never been one toย back downย from a challenge,ย and has always doneย whatever it takes to fulfill a dream.
Born and raised the daughter of farmers in Presque Isle, Maine, just south of the Canadian border, Murphy was an active kid who participated in all kinds of team sports. When she discovered boxing, she found herself.
โThat was during a time when women werenโt allowed to box under the USA Boxing rules, which didnโt happen until the 1990s. Iโd already had Shaunna, and was past the cut-off age of 34 for amateur boxers, but I knew I wanted to box in my lifetime, so I got a fake birth certificate and fulfilled that dream,โ says Murphy.
โI wanted to call this ‘Bare Knuckle Murphy’s’ because it hearkens back to the time when boxing had no rules. I like the spirit of that, and wanted this to be a place where that same energy, spirit and respect for the sport existed,โ says Murphy.
As coach and mentor of the gym’sย boxing team, Murphy recently coached a winning New England Golden Gloves fighter. ย She’s demonstrated time and again that her gift is in helping others to find their own strength, inside and outside the ring.ย ย One of those students, open class boxerย Joshua Silva, found her afterย 52 boutsย in Mexico prior to moving to Manchester.
“He told me, ‘From all the places I’ve boxed before, this is the place that improved me the most,” says Murphy.

In the past year she’s tried to rally, facing down the task of clearing out her home, fixing and painting and prepping it for sale.
It’s taken longer than expected, even with help from her friends and co-workers.
Now she’s just about out of time. A Realtor has been through the gym to take photographs, stirring Murphy’s resolve to come out swinging.
“I feelย more like I’mย part of something special than the owner of a bricks-and-mortar business,” she says.
In addition to the growing popularity of Go Ninja, Murphy continues toย work with at-risk youth in the communityย through a Child & Family Servicesย program.
She can’t imagine doing what she does anywhere else, although it’s something she may have to face.
โI donโt really want to think about that, even though I do, sometimes. I know we can take the boxing ring down in about four hours – itโs all movable parts. I know it would be a huge disruption. Maybe Iโd have to go look for an alternative place,โ she says.
She believes sheโs alreadyย in her right place.
โSomeone suggested finding a business partner. I would be open to that. It would have to be the right person and the right circumstances, but a collaboration like that might be good,โ says Murphy. โI hope someone buys the house. That would help.โ
Sheโs sacrificed plenty to keep things going this long, and now stands to lose everything in the process โ her home and the business she built from scratch. The fighter in her knows that itโs not over until itโs over.
โIโm still in this fight. Iโm resolved to find a way to make it happen, whatever it takes,โ she says. โThis is my life, my livelihood, my home โ itโs been everything to me.โ
Related story: Boxing gym owner inspired by community spirit
Click here to go to theย Save Our Gym fundraising page.
Learn more about Murphy’s Coaching Teamย here.
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