Massachusetts
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Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
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Manuel Pedro Pereira | 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, Manuel Pedro Pereira talks extensively about his childhood his Portugal, his military service in Angola and his involvement with professional soccer prior to emigrating to the U.S. and becoming a fisherman. |
M. Gloria De Sa | New Bedford, MA | University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, NOAA, Preserve America | |
Manuel Silva Vinagre | 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. Vinagre talks about his life in Portugal prior to coming to the U.S., including his experience aboard the Portuguese cod-fishing boats, coming to the U.S. and his father's death at sea. |
M. Gloria De Sa | New Bedford, MA | University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, NOAA, Preserve America | |
Manuel “Manny” Vinagre | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Manuel “Manny” Vinagre, a retired fisherman and boat owner, was born on December 17, 1940, in Buarcos, a village in Figueira da Foz, Portugal. He began working on the water at the age of 8, unloading sardine boats in his hometown. Manny comes from a long line of fishermen, including his father, grandfather, and uncle. His father tragically lost his life at sea while on a Gloucester dragger. Manny spent ten years fishing as part of the Portuguese “White Fleet,” dory fishing for cod off the coast of Newfoundland. |
Markham Starr | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Marcia Blount | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Ms. Blount, president of the Blount shipbuilding business, speaks about her involvement in the fishing industry and pressures on the business from waterfront development. |
Janice Gadaire Fleuriel | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Marco Randanzzo | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Marco Randazzo is a retired fisherman and rope sculptor originally from Palermo, Italy. Born in 1945, he immigrated to Gloucester, Massachusetts in 1969 following an earthquake in Italy that worsened an already difficult economy. Coming from a family of fishermen, Randazzo continued the tradition in Gloucester, often working as the "twine man" in charge of maintaining and repairing the nets on the fishing boats. In his retirement, he has taken his skill with knots and rope and creates rope sculptures of figures and religious icons, many related to his life on the sea. |
Madeleine Hall-Arber | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Margaret Curole | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Margaret Curole is a retired shrimp fisherman and a commercial fishing advocate from Galliano, Louisiana. She is of Cajun ethnic background. Curole did not come from a fishing heritage, but entered the industry after marrying a fisherman. Her husband's family has a long history in the Galliano area. Curole and her husband lived in a Louisiana marsh trapping camp where they engaged in shrimp fishing. Her husband quit his job the day before their daughter was born to build his first boat. Curole has been actively involved in commercial fishing advocacy. |
Janice Gadaire Fleuriel | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Maria Gomez | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Maria Gomez is from Guatemala and skins, cleans and packs fish at Bergie’s Seafood in New Bedford, MA. She has worked at the company for 15 years and her husband is also an employee. 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 | |
Mariana Moreno | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
Mariana Moreno is from Guatemala and has been working at Bergie’s seafood since age 16. She has learned all of the job duties at the plant including jobs typically reserved for men like hand cutting fish. She discusses adjusting her family budget to fluctuating work hours. She was recently promoted at Bergie’s and is always eager to learn more and take on more responsibilities in the workplace. |
Corinn Williams | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Marie Ligenza | Sector Management in New England |
Marie (Riena) Ligenza, 58, is married to commercial fisherman Ted Ligenza, who fishes out of Chatham, MA. They have three sons that are also commercial fishermen, though she is not from a fishing family herself. Her husband and sons all fish mainly inshore, her husband for fish and her sons for shellfish. Mrs. Ligenza tries to separate herself from the intricacies of fishing, beyond it supporting her family and her doing finances for her husband's fishing. |
Azure Cygler | Chatham, MA | NOAA | |
Marjorie Hamblin | Tales of Cape Cod |
Born in 1899, Mrs. |
Susan Shaw | Marstons Mills, MA | The William Brewster Nickerson Cape Cod History Archives |