The
daily loss of commercial fishing family cultural heritage demands
immediate action. Therefore, Coastal Heritage Alliance is proceeding
with thoughtful and deliberate steps to ensure quality, long lasting
constructive results through its innovative approach to the maintenance
and preservation of this threatened American way of life. CHA’s
primary focus will be to assist fishing families in passing on their
heritage to new generations within their own communities and to
the broader public audience.
Coastal
Heritage Alliance will become an organization composed of individuals,
vessels, skills and stories that are representative of commercial
fishing family traditions as they still exist in various regions
along the North American seaboard. A small number of culturally
significant retired fishing boats will be selected, procured, restored
and maintained in operational condition to facilitate the organization’s
mission both dock side and at sea.
Initially,
CHA does not anticipate ownership of land-based headquarters; but,
will seek out hailing ports around the North American coastline
to station individual vessels within its historic fleet. Dockage
will be secured through partnerships arranged with municipalities,
museums, educational institutions and other maritime entities as
may be appropriate and advantageous to CHA’s public programming
goals.
The
vessels will be utilized as a portal or passageway to the discovery
of the fisheries and fishing family cultural heritage at selected
sites. While dock side, each boat will become an interpretive center
accessible to the general public. Occasionally, each boat will be
used as a narrative stage and learning hub where traditions and
maritime skills are passed on.
On a seasonal basis, each historic vessel will embark on research
and documentation voyages. Traveling to the actual fishing grounds,
observing fishers at work and visiting fishing family communities
will be the ongoing critical work of the Alliance. Still photography,
field drawings, video, written text and audio recordings are some
techniques that will be used to capture and preserve aspects of
fishing family life. Goodwill and relationship building will be
key to CHA’s long term effectiveness within these close-knit
populations.
As
deemed appropriate, fishers, their families, their skills and their
stories will be incorporated into program curriculum presented to
the general public through a variety of media both dock side and
at sea. Through this involvement in the organizations education
work, fishing families will reinforce ties to their own culture
each time they articulate a story or teach a skill. Their incorporation
will enhance each learning experience by adding authenticity and
credibility to all of CHA’s public programming activities.
Once
established, CHA will orchestrate and repeat this three-phase process
of research, documentation and programming on a yearly cycle within
each region. Partnering with other local, regional and national
organizations may be possible and beneficial to the growth and success
of these efforts.
Beginning
with a modest first step of one vessel, CHA will open a portal site
in Puget Sound with the potential to research northward through
the Inside Passage of British Columbia and South East Alaska. The
intent is to create this initial site in the maritime town of Gig
Harbor, WA at the Skansie Brothers Park. The primary focus would
be on the heritage of commercial salmon fishing families and on
the history of wooden fishing boat construction within the region.
To accomplish this, CHA will secure the use of the 65’ retired
purse seine vessel Commencement, built in Gig Harbor by Skansie
Shipbuilding Co. in 1926. The Commencement will be used for dock
side interpretation, skill training, research/documentation trips
and sea going programs. Opportunities do exist to partner with the
town of Gig Harbor and the Gig Harbor Peninsula Historical Society
at this location.
As
resources allow, a second indigenous working watercraft would be
acquired and a portal site established in the Chesapeake Bay in
the mid-Atlantic region. Possibilities do exist for CHA to aquire
a culturally significant working vessel in this area. The eastern
shore town of Crisfield, Maryland would most likely become the base
of operation because of its proximity to numerous commercial fishing
communities.
Once
the Puget Sound and Chesapeake Bay sites are operational, a coastal
exchange of tradition bearers will be undertaken. The transfer of
skills and stories, of issues and concerns from one region to another
would provide the opportunity for a rich mix of cross-cultural awareness,
appreciation, support and celebration. The exchange would be a unique
and beneficial educational experience for fishing families and others
interested in learning first hand about this threatened North American
maritime culture.
Expansion
would continue as funding allowed, with CHA establishing programs
in other coastal areas such as New England, Northern California,
the Gulf states, Alaska and others. Achievement of these goals will
depend upon ongoing constructive affiliation and alliance-building
with fishing families and the present structures which support them.
It is anticipated that the establishment and favorable operation
of CHA’s inaugural portal site in Puget Sound will set the
pace and become a model program for export to these other regions. |