The Rise of the
Humble Herring. . . Once Plentiful at $1 per 1,000, Now Selling at 15 Cents
Each
Herring sold at 15 cents a piece on the Elizabeth City
retail fish market last week and the fact has raised little or no comment, and
yet it hasn’t been a quarter of a century since herring sold for $1 a thousand no
one thought of buying them at retail at all.
Twenty or 25 years ago the herring was the staple article of
diet of the poor and middle classes of eastern North Carolina. Great seine
fisheries on the sound of North Carolina caught millions of herring in a day.
Every family had its barrel of salted herring and most folk had herring smoked
or dried. Corn bread and herring built the bone and sinew of the proletariat. We
ate herrings for breakfast and herring for supper. The thrifty farmer of the
piney woods region of Perquimans and Chowan counties bought carloads of herring
from the fisheries of Chowan Sound, salted and smoked these herring, and carted
them to Norfolk, Va., where they found a ready market. The fisheries on Chowan
Sound salted and smoked these herring for shipment to every corner of the globe.
Before this generation the Chowan fisheries sent many a cargo of herring to
England to exchange for brick, wood-work, Grandfather Clocks, silverware, table
ware, linens and scarlet coats. Other cargoes of herring went to the West
Indies in exchange for sugar and rum.
The herring precluded the entry of old man High Cost of
Living into eastern North Carolina for more than a century. Labor living on
corn pone and herring washed down with tea made from home grown yopon and with
home made sorghum, a meal costing hardly more than a cent a person, never
dreamed of kicking on wages of 75 cents or a dollar a day. Large families had
no terrors for the fish fed proletariat.
But within a few years a great change has been wrought.
Nearly all of the great seine fisheries have disappeared. Where a catch of a
hundred thousand herrings in a seine was once considered a poor haul, now a
thousand herring taken in a pound net stand is considered a great catch.
Herring cost nearly as much to-day as other foods, and if they cost less people
probably wouldn’t want to eat them at all.
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