a_s1592_06_tape01 | Interview with restauranteur Joan Bouington | Sound | Fieldwork Seafood industry Restaurants Interviewing Interviews Oral histories Life histories Oral narratives Cooking and dining Seafood Food industry and trade Food preparation Food habits Cookery (Mullet) Cookery (Seafood) Menus Cookery (Alligator) Restaurateurs Merchants | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with restauranteur Joan Bouington
- Date
- 1986-10-15
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Interview with seafood restaurant owner Joan Bouington. Originally from New York, her family moved to Florida when she was ten. She discusses running a restaurant (her parents ran one, The Hut, since 1943); recipes; seafood cooking; mullet; oysters; shrimp; scallops; food; local history; and local fishers. Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. Also available on reel to reel (reels 6-7). The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection
a_s1592_06_tape03 | Carla Watkins interview for the Maritime Heritage Survey Project | Sound | Field recordings Interviews Oral narratives Fishing Seafood gathering Seafood industry Flatfish Gulf flounder Local history | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Carla Watkins interview for the Maritime Heritage Survey Project
- Date
- 1986-10-15
- Description
- One audio cassette. Interview with fisher (and spouse of a fisher) Carla Watkins. An Apalachicola native, she discusses local fishers; working on a mullet boat; fishing superstitions; boat naming; flounder fishing; shrimping; cooking seafood; recreation; and changes to Apalachicola.
- Collection
a_s1592_06_tape04 | Interview with shrimper Arthur Frank Ross | Sound | Fieldwork Interviewing Interviews Oral histories Oral narratives Life histories Fishing Seafood gathering Seafood industry Shrimps Boats and boating Weather Ethnometeorology Local history Trawls and trawling Fishers Shrimpers (persons) | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with shrimper Arthur Frank Ross
- Date
- 1986-10-16
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Interview with fisher Ross. He discusses shrimp; local history; family history; trawl nets; blessing of the fleet celebrations; home remedies; boat supplies; and shrimping crews. Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. Also available on reel to reel (reels 6-7). The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection
a_s1592_06_tape06 | Interview with seafood dealer George Kirvin | Sound | Fieldwork Interviewing Interviews Oral histories Oral narratives Life histories Fishing Seafood gathering Seafood industry Shrimpers (persons) Stores, retail Boats and boating Mullet fisheries Local history Family history Mullet fishing Oyster tongs Oyster shucking Weather Merchants Dealers (Retail trade) | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with seafood dealer George Kirvin
- Date
- 1986-10-09
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Interview with well-known seafood dealer Kirvin. In 1965, he won a Governor's Award for contribution to Florida seafood. He discusses his start as a fisher and a boat captain; Apalachicola Bay; his start in dealing seafood in 1960s; local contributions and activities; Governor's Award; rifts between commerical and sports fishing; politics; family history; learning fishing; local history; fishing; seining; mullet fishing; locating fish; oystering; and hurricanes. Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. Also available on reel to reel (reels 6-7). The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection
a_s1592_06_tape08 | Interview with oyster shuckers Virginia Duggar and Nanette Lolley | Sound | Fieldwork Interviewing Interviews Oral histories Oral narratives Life histories Fishing Seafood gathering Seafood industry Shrimpers (persons) Stores, retail Boats and boating Mullet fisheries Dealers (Retail trade) Local history Family history Mullet fishing Oyster tongs Oyster shucking Weather Shuckers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with oyster shuckers Virginia Duggar and Nanette Lolley
- Date
- 1986-10-10
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Interview with oyster shuckers Duggar and Lolley. They discuss family history; George Kirvin (Duggar's first boss); local oysters; job conditions; shucking; how they learned the craft; Loys Cain; tools for shucking; and fishing superstitions. Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. Also available on reel to reel (reels 6-7). The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection
a_s1592_06_tape10 | Anthony Toranto interview for the Maritime Heritage Survey Project | Sound | Field recordings Interviews Oral narratives Fishing Seafood Fish markets Boats Dealers (sales personnel) Local histories | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1592_06_tape12 | Loys Cain interview for the Maritime Heritage Survey Project | Sound | Field recordings Knives Occupational groups Metal craft Knife grinding Tools Oyster industries Fishing equipment and supplies Interviews Oral narratives Knifesmiths | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1592_06_tape13 | Corky Richards interview for the Maritime Heritage Survey Project | Sound | Field recordings Oyster tongs Fishing equipment and supplies Metal craft Oral histories Interviews Occupational groups Welders | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1592_06_tape16 | Interview with netmaker Costa Buzier | Sound | Fieldwork Sound recordings Netmaking Nets Fishing nets Occupational groups Textile arts Maritime life Interviewing Interviews Life histories Oral histories Oral narratives Family history Weather Ethnometeorology Beliefs and cultures Belief systems Occupational folklore Shrimpers (persons) Boats Hurricanes Net maker Fishers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with netmaker Costa Buzier
- Date
- 1986-11-11
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Interview with Buzier at his netmaking shop by Taylor and Hepburn. He discusses his father as a fisher and shrimper; family history; learning the fishing trade; shrimping; clamming; hurricanes; oystering; local businesses; George Kirvin; recreation activities of fishers; oyster canning; Apalachicola life; learning to make nets; net making tools and methods; shrimp trawls; net mending; weather folklore; superstitions; and netmakers like Billy Burbank. Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection
a_s1592_08_reel01 | Interview with fish house owner Grady Leavins | Sound | Fieldwork Seafood industry Fisheries processing Fishery processing plants Selling seafood Oyster fisheries Oyster industries Oyster shucking Oysters Fishing Interviewing Interviews Oral histories Life histories Oral narratives Oyster tongs Fishers Merchants Dealers (retail trade) | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with fish house owner Grady Leavins
- Date
- 1986-10-16
- Description
- Two reel to reels (also copied onto audio cassette). Interview with fish house owner Grady Leavins. He discusses his early life in Pensacola; learning the oyster fishing trade; local oystermen; opening his own seafood business; the oystering process; boats; the seafood industry; harvesting clams; Florida Seafood Festival; and ecological changes to Bay. Also available on reel to reels (reels 6-7). Between 1986 and 1987, a partnership between the Florida Folklife Program and the American Folk Center created the Maritime Heritage Survey Project. Focusing on the Gulf and Atlantic fishing cultures, and utilizing photographs, slides, oral histories, and on-site interviews, the survey climaxed with a demonstration area at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival. Also available on reel to reel (reels 6-7). The three main researchers were Nancy Nusz, Merri Belland, and project director David Taylor. Additional information on the project can be found in Taylor's project files in S 1716.
- Collection