Publication Date

12-1-1978

Volume

4

Issue

3

Keywords

Local history, Fish Plants, Fishing, Factory Workers, Carpentry, Boat Building, Boats, Island Communities, Women’s Social Conditions, Fishermen, Lobstermen, Lobstering, Sawmills, Logging

Disciplines

Human Ecology | Social and Cultural Anthropology | Sociology of Culture | Work, Economy and Organizations

Description

    Contents
  • 2 ‘Nobody Cuts the Same’ Cutting fish at O’Hara’s in Rockland, Maine, is a family affair where brothers and sisters, fathers and sons work together.
  • 14 Lamont Allen, Sr. A fish filleter for forty years, Lamont, now 49, is one of the fastest in the trade.
  • 20 Norman Collins To get ahead as a fish filleter, what you need is “that old drive,” says Norman.
  • 22 Put The Hammer Down Leo Thibeau of Kennebunk, Maine has a strong man’s trick of his own that not even the legendary John Henry claimed to do.
  • 26 Laying the Keel Salt covers the step by step laying of a keel for a 45 foot Herreschoff Ketch.
  • 35 Reaching for the Sun In the woods of York County, Maine, and in a mountain greenhouse, seven Salt apprentices and their woodsman trainer are practicing land management.
  • 43 Swan’s Island The second part of a two part series about the lives of people on a remote island off the northern coast of Maine.
  • 44 Island Women Life for the women of Swan’s Island has never been easy. The women have earned every inch of what is theirs.
  • 45 Ruth Ruth Moulden is a strong, warm and enduring woman who shares her life and thoughts with us.
  • 58 Walter Walter Stinson was a fish cutter, one of the fastest, and a lobster fisherman, until the day he almost didn’t make if back to shore.
  • 63 Edwin Edwin Gott muses over his 83 years on Swan’s Island and finds it “almost like a dream.”
  • 65 Basil Basil Joyce lives in the home his father built, making an island unto himself that has changed little since his birth.
  • 70 The Sawmill How a back country sawmill in northern New Hampshire operates fo serve boafbuilders and fishermen.
  • 76 Salt’s New Look Salt Magazine acquires a new look with this issue in keeping with its growing professionalism.

Publisher

SALT, Inc.

City

Kennebunkport, Maine

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SALT, Vol. 4, No. 3

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