Massachusetts
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Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
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Frank Mirarchi | Collapse of the New England Fishing Industry |
Frank Mirarchi, a seasoned veteran in the fishing industry, began his career in 1962. Over the decades, he has witnessed a multitude of changes within the industry, including significant collapses in the 1990s. Mirarchi has been an active participant in the management efforts to control fishing mortality, primarily through the implementation of 'days at sea' regulations. These regulations, however, have not been without their challenges and inefficiencies, which Mirarchi has experienced firsthand. |
Fabienne Lord | Scituate, MA | University of New Hampshire | |
Fred Mattera | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
On September 23, 2005, Janice Gadiare Fleuriel interviewed Fred Mattera as part of the Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project. Fred discusses his Italian heritage, his grandparents’ immigration to the United States, and growing up in Rhode Island. Originally planning to finish his degree and attend law school, he became fascinated with the competitive nature and financial prospects of fishing, and he decided to forgo law school to pursue a career at sea. |
Janice Gadaire Fleuriel | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Galon "Skip" Barlow | Fishtales |
Galon "Skip" Barlow is a long time fishermen from Cape Cod. He tells about a trip he took into Buzzards Bay forty years ago. |
Markham Starr | New Bedford, MA | Northeast Fisheries Science Center - NOAA, Working Waterfront Festival | |
Galon "Skip" Barlow | Fishtales |
Mr. Barlow describes a day shellfishing which did not go as he planned. |
Markham Starr | New Bedford, MA | Northeast Fisheries Science Center - NOAA, Working Waterfront Festival | |
Galon “Skip” Barlow | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Galon "Skip" Barlow is a retired shellfisherman and seafood restaurant owner from Buzzards Bay Village, Bourne, Massachusetts. Born into a family with a long history dating back to the 1600s in Cape Cod, Skip's lineage includes sea captains and notorious figures. His father, a navy veteran and canal pilot, instilled in him a love for the coastal habitat and shellfishing from a young age. Skip began his career in shellfishing in his early teens, learning the trade from his father. However, after realizing the difficulty of the profession, he returned to school. |
Markham Starr | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Gary Shepherd | Voices from the Science Centers |
Gary Shepherd is a research fishery biologist with the Coastal Pelagic Resources Task in the Population Dynamics Branch of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center. He started working for NMFS as a summer student aide in 1975 as a college freshman at UMass Dartmouth and did work-study in the Age and Growth Unit during his senior year. He went to Rutgers for graduate school where he conducted research on weakfish and striped bass populations. |
Joshua Wrigley | Falmouth, MA | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
George Edwards | Fishtales |
Mr. Edwards tells the story of a time his father was thought lost at sea. |
Markham Starr | New Bedford, MA | Northeast Fisheries Science Center - NOAA, Working Waterfront Festival | |
George Hampson | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Oral History Project |
Interview with George Hampson. |
Frank Taylor | Woods Hole, MA | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory, United States Geological Survey | |
George M. McClain | Fishermen Interviews of the U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries, 1893-1895 |
Interview with Captain George M. McClain of Rockport, MA by William Wakeham, Richard Rathbun and Hugh M. Smith of the U.S. Fish Commission. Interview contains descriptions of the mackerel fishery.
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William Wakeham, Richard Rathbun , Hugh M. Smith | Rockport, MA | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Archives II , New England Regional National Archives | |
Giao Van Dang | Casting A Wider Net: A Community Oral History Project |
Giao Van Dang was a scalloper who left his homeland of Vietnam as a part of the boat exodus after the Vietnam War. Like the other refugees in the boat, Giao fled the country with the hopes of finding better opportunities. Through hard work and determination, Giao was able to carve out a life for himself in America, returning to the ocean that he loved. Giao is currently happily retired and still stays connected to the ocean. |
Ngoc Giau Tran | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center |