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Certified Accessible By: National Network for Equitable Library ServiceTemps de fonctionnement: 08:12 hrsVoix de: Alexander MoskosPublisher:National Network for Equitable Library Service, 2022Note: This book was recorded thanks to support from the Government of Canada's Social Development Partnerships Program - Disability Component.
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- Author: McKervill, Hugh W.Date:Created2015Summary:
The Salmon People is a masterful history of Canada's west coast. From the first people's tales of salmon to BC's first cannery, to overfishing and the environmental concerns that still exist today, this comprehensive early history is a must-read for anyone interested in how BC's fishing industry reached where it is today. Told from the strong and witty voice of Hugh Wilford McKervill, who once fished alongside the First Nations peoples of Bella Bella, The Salmon People is both an historically accurate account of the fishing industry and a salty buoyant memoir. In the author's own words, "so long as there fish surging from the sea there will be salmon people willing to brave the torments of nature to catch them, and the salmon will probably come forever . . . if man does not destroy them."
Contents:- The first salmon
- The salmon people
- Fish and fur
- Canning comes to the coast
- On to the Fraser
- The cannery clan
- The big run
- Three strikes you're out!
- Iron Chink Smith
- The amalgamators
- The price of fish
- Rivers inlet
- Coastal characters
- Port Essington and the king of Skeena
- The case of Bill Cook and his people
- Thirteen hundred boats for sale
- cheap!
- To hell's gate and back
- Fishing for fun
- Atlantic invasion
- Don't go near the water.
Original Publisher: Vancouver, B.C., WhitecapLanguage(s): EnglishISBN: 9781770502086, 1770502084