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Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

A Lobster Tale
The Lobster Fishery of 
Prince Edward Island
 
Hadn't Ought To Go Fishing...
A Lobster Tale: The Lobster Fishery of Prince Edward Island

 

The fishing has always been good off Prince Edward Island. Cod, mackerel, herring, salmon - the Island's north shore offered easy access to the Gulf of St. Lawrence's rich fish stocks. But the early British settlers ignored the fishery. They tended to see it as a distraction from the more important task of creating farmland.

Just because the early British settlers ignored the fishery doesn't mean others weren't interested. By the early 1800s the huge American fishing fleet based in the Gloucester area of Massachusetts was coming here every season. First the Americans fished for cod. When the cod was fished out, they fished for mackerel. By the 1830s you could have stood on almost any part of the North shore and seen upwards of 600 schooners chasing huge shoals of mackerel. Somebody once asked one of these Gloucester fishing captains why he thought Prince Edward Islanders stay at home while he sailed so far to fish off their shores. "Well," he offered, "people with farms like them hadn't ought to go fishing."


Mackerel Boats

Mackerel Boats off Rustico, 1877
(Harper's Magazine, 1877)
By the 1860s a few Islanders were entering into partnership with larger American fishing companies. Even so, the mackerel fishery remained a mainly American concern. In the mid-1880s the mackerel stocks collapsed - due to over-fishing - and the Gloucester fleet disappeared forever from Prince Edward Island's shores. It probably would have been very quiet out there, if the lobster fishery hadn't already begun to take its place.


Fishing Stand

Fishing Stand near Rustico
(Harper's Magazine, 1877)
The fishery was an expensive business to get into. Catching and processing cod and mackerel - the main commercial species at the time - required a major investment in boats, gear, wharves and warehouses. Most Islanders with this sort of capital thought shipbuilding a safer investment and left large-scale fishing to the Americans.


Design

 

 
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