Maine
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Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
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Doug Anderson | Assessing Vulnerability and Resilience in Maine Fishing Communities |
Douglas Anderson Jr. was born in 1948, in Rockland, Maine, and has spent his entire life in Port Clyde, Maine, where he currently resides. He comes from a long line of fishermen, with both his mother's and father's sides of the family deeply involved in the fishing industry. His father was contracted to build a herring plant in Port Clyde in the 1940s, and Douglas was introduced to the fishing lifestyle at a young age, much like a child growing up on a farm. His heritage and early exposure to the industry led him to pursue a career in fishing, which he has thoroughly enjoyed. |
Anna Henry | Port Clyde, ME | University of Maine | |
Douglas B. | Finding Friendship Oral History Project |
Douglas is an experienced lobster fisherman from Friendship Village School. Born and raised in a coastal community, Douglas has spent his summers dedicated to the lobstering. With his extensive knowledge of fishing techniques and the local waters, Douglas has become a skilled lobsterman. |
Dillon | Friendship, ME | Friendship Museum , Friendship Village School | |
Dustin Delano | Young Fishermen in the Northeast United States |
Dustin Delano, 28 years old at the time of the interview, is owner-operator of the F/V Knotty Lady, a lobster boat out of Friendship, Maine. Dustin started fishing at age 11, the fourth generation in his family to follow this line of work. After taking a meandering path through higher education, he wound up back in his hometown doing what he loves: lobstering. He is one of several captains to capitalize on ecological changes by developing a menhaden seine fishery in Midcoast Maine. |
Sarah Schumann | Rockport, ME | NOAA | |
Eben Nieuwkerk | Young Fishermen in the Northeast United States |
Eben Nieuwkerk, 29 years old at the time of the interview, is the owner-operator of two gillnet and lobster boats in Portland and Kennebunkport, ME. Scope and Content Note |
Sarah Schumann | Wells, ME | NOAA | |
Ed Bassett | Maine Sea Grant Alewife and Eel Oral Histories |
Ed Bassett describes in this interview the importance of alewives to the Passamaquoddy tribe in Downeast Maine. The interview contains his recollections of how the marine ecosystem appeared to prior generations and the challenges facing alewives right now. |
Julia Beaty | Perry, ME | NOAA Preserve America Initiative, Maine Sea Grant | |
Eden Divney |
On June 18, 2024, Camden Hunt interviewed Eden Divney in Portland, Maine. Eden Divney is the land manager at Bangs Island Mussels and has worked in the aquaculture industry for over three years. Born in 1998 and raised in southern Maine, Divney’s background includes a mix of family ties to recreational fishing and shipbuilding. Although they did not complete a college degree, Divney studied various subjects, including medical assisting and criminal justice, and worked in food service before joining Bangs Island Mussels during the COVID-19 pandemic. |
Camden Hunt | Portland, ME | University of Maine, College of the Atlantic | ||
Edward Barrett | Sector Management in New England |
Edward Barrett, 56, is a fisherman out of Plymouth, Massachusetts. He began fishing in high school, purchased his first boat in 1979, and has worked as an inshore mobile gear fisherman for the past 15 years. He has been a member of sector 10 since sector management began and serves as the President of Sector 10, as well as staying actively involved in the fisheries community. Mr. Barrett views sectors negatively, and especially views catch shares as significantly cost prohibitive for small boats. Since sectors began, Mr. |
Samantha Sperry | Brewer, ME | NOAA | |
Edward French | Assessing Vulnerability and Resilience in Maine Fishing Communities |
Edward French, born in 1959, is a lifelong resident of Eastport, Maine, with a deep-rooted history in commercial fishing. His first involvement in the industry was as a crew member on a herring carrier, and he later ventured into tub trawling and scalloping on his own during the summer and fall seasons. In addition to his hands-on experience in the fisheries, French has also covered the industry for the local newspaper, Quoddy Tides. |
Anna Henry | Eastport, ME | University of Maine | |
Edward Thorbjornson | Maine Coast Oral History Initiative |
Fisherman Edward Thorbjornson of Tenant's Harbor, ME recalls his career fishing with the 40 Fathom redfish fleet, shrimping and groundfish dragging. This interview was produced with funding from the Maine Humanities Council. |
Joshua Wrigley | Tenants Harbor, ME | Maine Coast Fishermen's Association, The Island Institute, Maine Humanities Council | |
Elaine Lowell | The Last Sardine Cannery - Prospect Harbor, Maine |
Elaine Lowell was born in Stueben, Maine, in 1915. She and her husband George raised three children in Prospect Harbor. Elaine worked for the Stinson Canning Company in Prospect Harbor, Maine. She had several jobs at the former cannery: cutting and packing sardines, cleaning the offices at night, transporting injured employees to the hospital, and getting up at four o’clock in the morning to call the cannery employees if there was herring to come in to cut and pack. |
Keith Ludden | Prospect Harbor, ME | Oral History & Folklife Research, Inc. |