In 1971, photographer Alec Gill began to document the life of Hull’s Hessle Road fishing community, building up a collection of over 6,600 black and white negatives. Here he shares some of the memories evoked by his pictures…
Having hitch-hiked abroad and photographed people in Berlin, Syracuse and Beirut, I suddenly had the thought: why don’t I become a tourist in my own town? And so I focused upon my home port’s fishing community.
Why? Because the fishing families seemed to get a ‘bad press’ from outsiders. Fish is a smelly product; fishermen were falsely seen as drunkards, and the women as screaming fishwives. Even my own mother made derogatory remarks about Hessle Roaders. But I found the people to be exceptionally nice and friendly.
On top of the social snobbery within Hull, the trawler owners ran the fish dock like a feudal system, with casual labour and ‘walkabouts’ for anyone who stepped out of line. And the fishing families were already ‘underdogs’ when confronted by Mother Nature in the teeth of an Arctic storm. So I hoped, through my images, to portray the Hull fishing community in a more positive light…
This is just a small selection of Alec Gill’s photographs features in the latest issue of Fishing News. For more like this, subscribe now to Fishing News. Please note that some of the above images have been slightly cropped for upload purposes.