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Lyn Dennis interview [transcript]
1993-02-11
text
Dennis, Lyn (interviewee) Morris, Carole Teshima (interviewer)
oral histories (literary works) interviews
application/pdf
Women in the commercial fishing industry research collection
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv25667/
WaBeCP Western Washington University
Center for Pacific Northwest Studies
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Libraries Heritage Resources, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Women in the Commercial Fishing Industry Research Collection, Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Libraries Heritage Resources, Western Washington University.
dennis19930211_transcript
wwu:31422
Funding to digitize this resource was made available by a grant from the Washington State Legislature to the Washington Women's History Consortium.
Lyn Dennis interview
Interview with Lyn Dennis by Carole Teshima Morris. Dennis recounts her experience as a female fisherman in the Pacific Northwest, where she fished for both sockeye salmon and crab. Ms. Dennis explains that she first fished the Nooksack River in a 12-foot boat, gradually working her way up to a 21-foot gill-netter (The Humdinger) operating out of Point Roberts. She describes the tribal fisheries system (in which enrolled tribal members can receive treaty licenses for commercial fishing), differences between fishing on rivers and fishing in salt water, and selection of crew members. She describes the realities of commercial fishing, fishing in inclement weather, and lessons learned from those experiences. She discusses discrimination in fishing and ways to overcome that adversity, and the economic and political climate of the commercial fishing industry in the 1990s, including some ramifications of the US-Canada Treaty on tribal fishing operations.
Digital object made available by the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, Western Libraries Heritage Resources, Western Washington University.
dennis19930211
wwu:31418