Massachusetts
321 - 330 of 486
Page 33 of 49
Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mark Bergeron | Workers on the New Bedford Waterfront |
The son of a scalloper, Mark was introduced to the waterfront early. Not knowing what he wanted to do as a career after graduating from high school, he started buying and selling fish. Eventually, he and his partner worked their way up from nothing to buying Bergies. He discusses the changes in the business from when he started, especially the harsh realities of today that are a consequence of strict regulations (so fewer fish being landed) and changes in technology that has taken the jobs of many workers. |
Madeleine Hall-Arber | New Bedford, MA | New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center | |
Mark Phillips | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Mark Phillips is a seasoned fisherman and boat owner based in Greenport, New York. Born on December 7, 1956, Phillips has been involved in the fishing industry since he was eight years old. His family has a long history of involvement with the sea, with his great grandfather being a coastal trader. However, Phillips is the only member of his family to become a full-time fisherman. He owns and operates an 83-foot dragger named F/V ILLUSION, fishing out of Greenport, Long Island, New York, and New Bedford, Massachusetts. |
Madeleine Hall-Arber | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Mark Ring | Strengthening Community Resilience in America’s Oldest Seaport |
On December 16, 2019, Molly Graham interviewed Mark Ring for the Strengthening Community Resilience in America’s Oldest Seaport project. Mark Ring was born in Beverly, Massachusetts, in 1957. He graduated from Manchester High School in 1975. Growing up, Mark's father ran a marina, and he had uncles who were commercial fishermen. He spent his teenage years fishing on a skiff and lobstering with his uncles. After high school, Mark moved to Gloucester and fished - gillnetting and swordfishing - during the 1970s and 1980s. |
Molly Graham | Gloucester, MA | NOAA Fisheries Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, Cape Ann Partnership for Science, Technology, and the Natural Environment | |
Martin Rockwell Bartlett | Oral History Collection - Fishing and Fisheries |
On September 10, 1981, Robert Livingstone interviewed Martin Rockwell Bartlett in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, as part of a series documenting the history of the local fishing industry. Bartlett, born in 1933 in Mount Kisco, New York, served in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1952 to 1956 before beginning his career in fisheries research and commercial fishing. He worked with biologist Frank Mather on tuna migration studies and later transitioned into commercial fishing, focusing on swordfish and longline operations. |
Robert Livingstone | Woods Hole, MA | Woods Hole Historical Museum | |
Marty Olsen | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
Marty Olsen is a retired fisherman. He was born in New Jersey and later moved to Fairhaven, Massachusetts. Marty joined the Army and started fishing in 1961, primarily out of New Bedford and briefly in Boston. Olsen's children did not follow in his footsteps, with his son becoming an electrician and his daughters marrying shore people. |
Millie Rahn | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Marvin Grosslein | Voices from the Science Centers |
Marvin Grosslein was born October 24, 1929 in Seattle. He grew up in Minnesota where a summer job with the Minnesota Conservation Department sparked his interest in fisheries science. He graduated from the University of Minnesota before attending Cornell University for his PhD. For his doctoral thesis, Dr. Grosslein developed a survey program that would provide a basis for estimating catches of all species. His graduate work took him to Woods Hole in the summer of 1959. He began full time in 1961 after completing his PhD. |
Joshua Wrigley | West Falmouth, MA | NOAA-NMFS, Northeast Fisheries Science Center | |
Mary Carreiro | Tales of Cape Cod |
Mary Carreiro interview with Tales of Cape Cod, May 15, 1978 in Provincetown, MA. Born in 1903, Mary recalls how her father came to Provincetown as a stowaway on a fishing vessel from the Azore Islands and working off the cost of passage after he was brought to the customs office.She describes Provincetown before World War I. Tells of trains and boats coming to Provincetown in the summer and the large boat the Dorothy Bradford carried 1200-1300 people. She tells of her first jobs at 13 where she was paid $1.50 per week washing silverware and glasses at the Atlant |
Betty Richards | Provincetown, MA | The William Brewster Nickerson Cape Cod History Archives | |
Mary and Michael Yortson | The Working Waterfront Festival Community Documentation Project |
The interview conducted on September 25, 2005, features two individuals: Mike Yortson and Mary Yortson Sylvia. Mike Yortson is the son of Mary Yortson Sylvia. Mary was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, in 1911 and had two sons. Mike was born in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1955 but grew up in New Bedford after his father's death. Mary's family immigrated from St. Michael's in the Azores, and she worked in a doctor's dining room in Providence, where she met her first husband, Manny Cruz. Manny was lost at sea when Mary was 29 years old. |
Janice Gadaire Fleuriel | New Bedford, MA | Working Waterfront Festival | |
Mary E. Madeiros | Tales of Cape Cod |
Madeiros describes her experiences living on Cape Cod in Cotuit in the 1920's, including bootleggers, silent movies, the Barnstable Fair, travelling medicine shows, the one room schoolhouse in Santuit, MA, travelling peddlers and local businesses, doctors and medical care, and Christmas celebrations. |
Frank Rudd | Cotuit, MA | The William Brewster Nickerson Cape Cod History Archives | |
Mary Hinckley Crane | Tales of Cape Cod |
Born in 1914, Mrs. Crane talks about her ancestors coming to Situate and moving down to Barnstable in 1639. |
William Steere | Barnstable, MA | The William Brewster Nickerson Cape Cod History Archives |