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Swansea, MA. is over fished by farmers
....according to this 1917 town meeting report. plus we needed to purchase a pass for the privilege of fishing even back then.
Fisheries The shores of Swansea have abounded in shell-fish, though at present, having been overworked there is scarcity. The tidal-rivers, which make up into the Town used to afford good fishing also; but of late years, traps have taken the migratory fish before they get to the mouths of the rivers. However, *'the fishing-privilege" is still sold at auction, with little or no competition, at the annual March meeting. As has been mentioned in another connection, there was a period, at the close of the war of 1812, when fisheries became **more attractive and lucrative than farming," in particular to the Gardners of Gardner's Neck, now known as South Swansea. The war of 1812 having interfered with whaling interests, the manufacture of oil from menhaden was made profitable also. And later there was quite a general demand for dressed and salted menhaden which were shipped to the Southern markets and to the West Indies. It is probable that the Indians taught the first white settlers to use fish in the hills of corn and other crops as fertilizer; and it became a common practice with the Swansea farmers. But later, between 1880, and 1890, fish-fertilizers, as by-products of the menhaden oil industry, became impor- tant in this town, at the works of Wm. J. Brightman & Co., on Cole's River, at Touisset, where *'the fishworks" became a scientific manufactory. Fish scraps from the oil-works at Tiverton, potash from New York, acid phosphates from the Rumford Chemical works, and bones from Hargraves of Fall River were compounded according to formula, to meet the demands of different kinds of soils and crops. C. M. O'Brien was the superintendent of the business, and from fifty to sixty, or even more, men were in the employ of the Company, varying at different seasons of the year. that's all it had about fisheries but here is the link if you want to read it. http://archive.org/stream/historyofs...0wrig_djvu.txt |
cool
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Great read. I grew up on the Coles River. I could here pogies splashing from my bedroom window. My parents still live in the same house and my Dad has not seen many pogies in front of the house.
My Golden Retriever (Angle), would swim into pogie schools and catch the fish in her mouth and bury them alive on the beach. Swansea, has a very rich fishery and agricultural history. I miss my old Hood! |
Interesting stuff
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