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UNITED STATES FISH
COMMISSION RECORDS (1871-1892)
#256
(4.66 cubic feet: 2 DB, 2 Flt/B, 3 F/O,
11(.5) Flt/B, 1 oversize folder)
by: Grace Angle & Robert S.
Harding, 1988
History
The United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries,
established in 1871, launched and carried out
the first sustained study of marine biology in the United States. It was instrumental in the
artificial
propagation of fish, thus increasing the country's fish resources, and concentrating attention on
the
preservation of natural resources. In 1877, the Commission initiated the collection of detailed
and
reliable data on American commercial fisheries, their modernization, and
improvement.
The immediate origin of the Fish Commission lay in a
dispute in southern New England between
the owners of traps (nets, weirs, or other means of capturing large quantities of fish) and a much
larger group of fishermen who fished from small boats or the shore with single lines.
Accusations
that traps were responsible for the diminution in the supply of coastal fish raged. Spencer
Fullerton
Baird, Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, with a keen interest in marine biology,
had
followed the dispute closely. He recognized that the practical work related to its solution would
contribute to proving the utilitarian value of science and provide excellent opportunities for basic
marine biological research. Backed by prominent friends and his own knowledge of the political
dynamics of Washington, he sought a congressional appropriation for an extended investigation
of
coastal fisheries.
At the request of Henry L. Dawes, chairman of the
Appropriations Committee of the House of
Representatives to whom Baird had turned for help, he outlined in a letter of January 3, 1871, the
dispute in southern New England, including a proposal for a commission charged with
determining
the scientific reason for the decrease in coastal species and headed by a mediator empowered to
consult with the states and seek a fair solution. As it shortly emerged from Congress the
resolution
established the U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries. This created a body with no time limits,
and without restriction as to area, thus opening the way to a national investigation. The head of
this
new agency was to be appointed by the President, to be an officer of the government, and to serve
without additional pay. With its basic authorization assured, a $5,000 appropriation was quickly
approved and Spencer Baird, Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, was appointed
Commissioner by President Grant. He took the oath of office on March 8, 1871.1
While its appropriations for the propagation of fish
far exceeded those for research, the Commission
on Fish and Fisheries was influential in promoting scientific development in the federal
government. In 1881, the Congress at Commissioner Baird's request, appropriated $190,000 for
a
sea-going vessel, the Albatross, especially equipped for marine biology. He settled on
Wood's Hole
in Massachusetts as the site for a permanent scientific station and arranged for the purchase of
the
land by private subscribers such as the Johns Hopkins University, Princeton University, and
Williams College. Such institutions had a right to send a specialist to the station to do research.
The marine biological laboratory at Wood's Hole developed into a world famous research
institution.
In 1903, the independent commission became the
Bureau of Fisheries in the Department of
Commerce and Labor. The Bureau was transferred to the Department of the Interior in 1939 and
in
1940 was merged with another bureau to become the Fish and Wildlife Service.
Scope and
Content
Most of the collection consists of drawings, both pen
and ink and pencil, photo-engravings and
photographs and cyanotypes of fish, fishermen, fishing gear, nets, traps, seines, fishing vessels
both
small and large, and fish processing. Some are identified by type, some by location; others lack
specific identification. Many carry comments and directions for reduction. These may have been
illustrations for annual or other reports and publications. Many of the photographs were taken in
the 1880's and 90's. The key to a number of them is in U.S. National Museum Bulletin No.
27,
which consists of descriptive catalogues of the collections sent by the United States to the
International Fisheries Exhibition held in London in 1883.2 Where a photograph has been identified
in Bulletin No. 27, a notation of the appropriate page number has been made on the back of the
photo.
Also included is a bound, handwritten journal of the
Commission with entries that relate to official
actions such as its establishment, its appropriations, and Congressional authorizations for specific
activities. These identify the statute or House or Senate journal entry that is applicable. The
entries
run from February 9, 1871 to December 24, 1892. There is an index by subject. There are some
handwritten notes about fishing vessels made by Captain J. W. Collins and his partial draft
manuscript describing fishing vessels. A draft of his annual report for 1884 is also included. A
small amount of correspondence relates to descriptions of fishing vessels also.
Provenance
About 1940, when the Bureau of Fisheries became
part of the Department of the Interior and was
renamed the Fish and Wildlife Service, most of these photographs were given to Mr. Frank
Taylor
of the U. S. National Museum, Department of the Interior. The collection was transferred to the
Division of Transportation of the NMAH in c. 1960s . The collection was transferred
to the
Archives
Center from the Division of Transportation on April 10, 1987.
Many of the photographs, particularly those identified
in Bulletin No. 27 of the U. S. National
Museum were taken by Thomas W. Smillie on the staff of the Smithsonian and also of the U.S.
National Museum.
Container
List
| Box |
Folder |
|
| 1 |
1 |
Actions Relating to the
United States Fish Commission-Appropriations,
Authorizations, Appointments, etc. |
|
2 |
Collins, J. W., Annual
Report, 1884. |
|
3 |
Collins, J. W.,
Miscellaneous Memoranda. |
|
4 |
Collins, J. W., Notes on
Fishing Vessels. |
|
5 |
Correspondence,
September 15, 1881 - October 13, 1892 and undated. |
|
6 |
Correspondence, June 20,
1906 - June 22, 1906; February 4, 1915. |
|
7 |
Description of Fishing
Vessels, handwritten. |
|
8 |
Description of Fishing
Vessels, draft manuscript. |
|
9 |
Fishing Vessels, pencil
sketches. |
|
10 |
Fishing Vessels, photo
engravings. |
|
11 |
Guide to
Photographs. |
|
12 |
Miscellaneous
Images. |
|
13 |
Negative Numbers,
Negative Catalogue. |
|
14 |
Note re Unidentified
Photograph. |
|
15 |
Patent, Fishing Trap,
May 6, 1877, H. Webb. |
|
16 |
U. S. Department of
Agriculture Bulletins, Personnel Administration, April
15, 1938; June 20, 1938; February 28, 1939. |
| 2 |
1 |
Fish Processing. |
|
2 |
Fishing, Indians, Aleuts,
Eskimos and Others. |
|
3 |
Herring,
graphics. |
|
4 |
Sea
Elephants. |
|
5 |
Sea
Scallops. |
|
6 |
Seals. |
|
7 |
Walrus, Sea Otter,
Manatee. |
|
8 |
Whales. |
| 3 |
1 |
Gear,
I. |
|
2 |
Gear,
II. |
|
3 |
Miscellaneous Sketches,
H. W. Elliott and J. W. Collins. |
|
4 |
Nets. |
| 3A |
1 |
Nets, other
countries. |
|
2 |
Nets, United
States. |
|
3 |
Trawls. |
|
4 |
Unidentified
Diagram. |
| 4 |
1 |
Fishing
Crews. |
|
2 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats identified in U. S. National Museum Bulletin
#27. |
|
3 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats I. |
|
4 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats II. |
|
5 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats III. |
|
6 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats, diagrams. |
|
7 |
Fishing Vessels and
Boats, sketches by H. W. Elliot and J. W. Collins. |
| 5 |
1 |
Boat Models, identified
in Bulletin #27. |
|
2 |
Boat Models, not
identified in Bulletin #27.
|
|
3 |
Fish and
Fishing. |
|
4 |
Sailing
Vessels. |
| 6 |
1 |
Gloucester I, identified in
Bulletin #27. |
|
2 |
Gloucester II, identified
in Bulletin #27. |
|
3 |
Gloucester III, identified
in Bulletin #27. |
|
4 |
Gloucester, blueprints
identified in Bulletin #27. |
| 7 |
1 |
Gloucester. |
|
2 |
Salmon. |
|
3 |
Shad. |
| 8 |
1 |
Fishermen, identified in
Bulletin #27. |
|
2 |
Fishermen, not identified
in Bulletin #27. |
|
3 |
Fishermen's Houses,
identified in Bulletin #27. |
|
4 |
Fishermen's Houses, not
identified in Bulletin #27. |
| 9 |
1 |
Detroit,
Michigan. |
|
2 |
Eastport,
Maine. |
|
3 |
Oxford,
Maryland. |
|
4 |
Nantucket,
Massachusetts. |
|
5 |
Rockport, Maine. |
|
6 |
Tiverton, Rhode
Island. |
|
7 |
Other Locations,
identified in Bulletin #27. |
|
8 |
Other Locations, not
identified in Bulletin #27. |
| 10 |
1 |
Buildings Related to the
Fishing Industry. |
|
2 |
Gloucester, not identified
in Bulletin #27. |
|
3 |
Pelagic
Sealers. |
|
4 |
Purse Net Fishing,
identified in Bulletin #27. |
|
5 |
Views from Other
Countries. |
| 11 |
1 |
Fishing Vessels,
identified in Bulletin #27. |
|
2 |
Miscellaneous
Photographs and Blueprints identified in Bulletin #27. |
| 12 |
1 |
Miscellaneous
Photographs identified by subject I. |
|
2 |
Miscellaneous
Photographs, identified by subject, II. |
| 13 |
1 |
Albatross
I. |
|
2 |
Albatross
II. |
| 14 |
1 |
Albatross,
blueprints. |
|
2 |
Fishhawk. |
|
3 |
Grampus and
Lookout. |
|
4 |
Launches,
cyanotypes. |
|
5 |
Thetis. |
|
6 |
Wood's
Hole. |
| 15 |
1 |
Catamarans, Dugouts,
South America and West Indies, cyanotypes. |
|
2 |
Outriggers and other
Native Boats, South Seas Expedition of Albatross,
1899-1900. |
|
3 |
Fishing Vessels, Foreign
Models. |
|
4 |
Fishing Vessels, Foreign
Models, Berlin Exposition I. |
|
5 |
Fishing Vessels, Foreign
Models, Berlin Exposition II. |
| 16 |
1 |
Alaska Investigation,
1894-1895, blueprints. |
|
2 |
Alaska Investigation,
1908, blueprints. |
|
3 |
Alert, photographs and
cyanotypes. |
|
4 |
Cyanotypes, identified by
subject. |
|
5 |
Cyanotypes, not
identified by subject. |
|
6 |
New England Fishing
schooners from D. Foster Taylor, and Chesapeake
Bay Bug Eyes. |
| 17 |
1 |
Boston
Wharves. |
|
2 |
Fish
Processing. |
|
3 |
Fishing
Vessels. |
|
4 |
Fulton Market, New
York. |
|
5 |
Miscellaneous
Cyanotypes, identified by subject. |
|
6 |
Wharves and
Buildings. |
| 18 |
1 |
Miscellaneous
unidentified photographs I. |
| 19 |
1 |
Miscellaneous
Unidentified photographs II. |
|
2 |
Miscellaneous
Unidentified photographs III. |
| 20 |
1 |
Sailing Vessels in
Groups. |
|
2 |
Fishing Vessels &
Boats V. |
|
3 |
Fishing Vessels &
Boats VI. |
| Oversize
Folder |
1 |
Bureau of Fisheries
Poster, "Eat More Fish." |
|
2 |
Bureau of Fisheries,
Statistics of Shrimp Industry, 1916. |
|
3 |
Canned Shrimp,
Saturday Evening Post. |
|
4 |
Diagram,
unidentified. |
|
5 |
Discharging Fresh
Halibut, pencil. |
|
6 |
Halibut Schooner, pen
and ink. |
|
7 |
Menhaden Steamer, pen
and ink. |
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