Chickity Check It! Commercial Fishers: Atlantic Cod

image

I saw some of the Fishing company posters on MonkeyFists site

You ought to check out the Commercial Fishers:Atlantic Cod pictures from Gloucester’s fishing industry in the 1800’s.

Here is but a small portion of their site.  Click this link to see all the rest of the pictures and stories

A Terrible Mortality

Gloucester’s dependence on the North Atlantic meant a close acquaintance with tragedy and death. “The history of the Gloucester fisheries has been written in tears,” wrote an anonymous reporter in 1876.

Between 1866 and 1890, more than 380 schooners and 2,450 Gloucester men never returned from the fishing grounds. In a single storm on August 24, 1873, nine Gloucester vessels and 128 fishermen were lost. In 1865, community members formed the Gloucester Fisherman’s and Seaman’s Widows and Orphan’s Aid Society Fund to help fishermen’s families.

Widows’ Home

This house was built for fishermen’s widows in Gloucester around 1870. It had ten apartments of three rooms each. Rent for each apartment was $3 per month.

“When will the slaughter cease?”

In 1882, Capt. Joseph Collins asked this question in Gloucester’s newspaper, the Cape Ann Weekly Advertiser. Too many fishermen perished at sea, and Collins and others lobbied for new schooner designs featuring deeper, more stable hulls and sail plans that didn’t require a long bowsprit, the spar that projected forward from the bow.

5 thoughts on “Chickity Check It! Commercial Fishers: Atlantic Cod

  1. Hi Joey, This has to be the best, most interesting article I have ever read. It is exceptional. Thank you so much for posting. OMG, Cod Liver Oil. Well, my mother gave that to me in the 60’s. I thought it was punishment…LOL… I can still remember the taste. Not good.

    Like

  2. P.S. I did take it. I didn’t dare tell her I didn’t want it. As bad as it tasted. Mother knows best, right? Maybe not always…lol…

    Like

  3. I have seen the names of my relatives engraved on our Fisherman’s Memorial Site. Of course, I never knew them. It wasn’t until I saw “The Perfect Storm” that I got a glimpse of what it must have been like for them at sea. It gave me a whole new appreciation for what it means to be a fisherman. My respect for them is enormous.

    Like

Leaving a comment rewards the author of this post- add to the discussion here-