Foreign factory trawlers
Circa 1966
Photographer: unknown
In 1954, a British factory trawler appeared on the
Grand Banks. Thus began a 22-year period of high-tech, high-volume fishing
in international waters off New England, eventually dominated by Soviet
and eastern European vessels.
These vessels worked in groups, with as
many as 20 trawlers transferring landings to a single 500-foot factory
processor, as well as tender vessels handling repairs, refueling, and
other at-sea services.
With passage of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Act in 1976, the United States claimed exclusive jurisdiction over economic
activities like fishing within 200 miles of her coast. After that, international
fleets were phased out in the region, hauling their last load in 1978. |