Massachusetts
211 - 220 of 486
Page 22 of 49
Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jay Speakman | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Jay Speakman is a former fisherman with a rich history in the fishing industry. Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Speakman considers Maine his true home, where he has roots going back several generations. His early experiences in fishing began as a child during summers spent on Little Cranberry Island, Maine, where he was introduced to lobster fishing. His career later took him to British Columbia and Alaska in the 1970s, where he engaged in various fishing activities including gill netting herring roe, long lining and seining for halibut, set netting for salmon and King Crabbing. |
Madeleine Hall-Arber | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Jeffery Cook | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Jeff Cook is one of the owners of New Bedford Welding Supply in New Bedford, MA. He studied welding in high school and college and has worked for his family run business from a young age, starting with painting the gas cylinders and working his way up to customer sales. He discusses the role of New Bedford Welding Supply in the fishing industry, the changes in welding equipment over the years, the role of his family members in the family business, and the positive and negative aspects of his job. |
Laura Orleans | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Jenifer Sanabria | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Jenifer Sanabria emigrated from Honduras to New Bedford, MA nine years ago and currently works in a packing line at a seafood factory. The company works with a variety of fish including filleted codfish, the process starts from when the boats arrive with the product, and they are processed, filleted and packaged for distribution across New England. She has a family back home that she has committed to providing to for the rest of her life. |
Corinn Williams | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Jim Ruhle | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Jim Ruhle is a third-generation fisherman from Long Island, New York, born in 1948. He spent most of his life in Wanchese, North Carolina, where he continued his family's fishing tradition. Ruhle has two sons, one of whom works with him full-time, and the other part-time, making them the fourth generation in this fishing lineage. Ruhle's family has a rich history in the fishing industry, with his father pioneering the longline swordfish fishery in North Carolina. Ruhle has worked on various fishing boats, including a ninety-foot steel boat he now owns. |
Janice Gadaire Fleuriel | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
João Ferreira Testa | Portuguese-American Fishermen in New Bedford |
This is one of a set of 15 oral histories with Portuguese immigrant fishermen who worked out of the port of New Bedford. The project was sponsored by a NOAA Preserve America grant. In this interview Mr. Testa talks about his life prior to coming to the U.S., including fishing, social and religious traditions. Part of that description, includes his tuna-fishing experience in North Africa, and cod-fishing in the Grand Banks during the World War II. He also describes what brought him to the U.S. |
M. Gloria De Sa | New Bedford, MA | University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, NOAA, Preserve America | |
João Manuel Fernandes | Portuguese-American Fishermen in New Bedford |
This is one of a set of 15 oral histories with Portuguese immigrant fishermen who worked out of the port of New Bedford. The project was sponsored by a NOAA Preserve America grant. In this interview João Fernandes describes his childhood in Portugal as the son of a fisherman, his training to work in the same profession as his father and how he came to Louisiana to work in the shrimp fisheries with other Portuguese immigrants. |
M. Gloria De Sa | New Bedford, MA | University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, NOAA, Preserve America | |
Joao “John” Bernardo | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Joao “John” Bernardo describes his work as an upholsterer for the last 38 years, including jobs for commercial fishing boat owners. Bernardo discusses his other jobs related to the commercial fishing industry, working with other Portuguese immigrants in the fish houses and how he learned his current craft. This oral history was produced in 2017 as part of the Workers on the Waterfront Oral History Project conducted by New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center with funding from an Archie Green Fellowship provided by the Library of Congress. |
Corinn Williams | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Joe Kaknes | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Joe Kaknes is a retired fisherman from Gloucester, Massachusetts. He was born in 1950 and grew up in the Bay View neighborhood of Gloucester. His family background is a mix of Greek and Irish heritage. Joe Kaknes is known for his experiences in the fishing industry, particularly swordfishing, and his insights into the challenges and changes faced by fishermen over the years. |
Marilyn Belmore | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Joe Moniz | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Joe Moniz first came to the States as a soccer player. Later he emigrated to New Bedford from St. Michael in the Azores, where he’d been a farmer, as were most of his family. He’s been a lumper for many years, although he started out in construction for five years before lumping. He talks about the work of a lumper and the process of unloading boats, changes in the industry and in boats and technology and its effects on the job, changes in kinds and hauls of fish, and his love for the independence of the work. |
Fred Calabretta | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Joe Orlando | Strengthening Community Resilience in America’s Oldest Seaport |
On August 23, 2019, Molly Graham interviewed Joseph Orlando for the Strengthening Community Resilience in America’s Oldest Seaport project. |
Molly Graham | Gloucester, MA | NOAA Fisheries Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, Cape Ann Partnership for Science, Technology, and the Natural Environment |