6 January 2023
Written by John Worrall
Herring’s French Connection
For three decades, the East Anglian herring fishery’s
highest accolade was the award of the Prunier Trophy.
There she heard of the parlous state of the East Anglian
herring industry. Catches, though still substantial, had been in steady decline
since the pre-First World War peak, as the increased efficiency of steam and
then diesel power ate into stocks.
More particularly, tastes had changed. The ‘king of fish’ –
oily, nutritious and much rated by gourmands for its versatility and, on the
Continent, for the pickled version – had lost domestic appeal because its
boniness didn’t go well with batter and chips. First-sale prices were
fluctuating to the extent that catches occasionally went straight for fishmeal.
“Sacré bleu!” exclaimed Madame (allegedly). The fish of the
East Anglian autumn ‘home fishery’ was of the same spawnfilled excellence, but
the problem was consumer attitude. Something had to be done.
Sculptor Charles Sykes was commissioned to produce a trophy
in Purbeck marble – a hand rising from a wave grasping a herring (but was the
hand waving or drowning?) – onto which the size of the catch and name of the
winning boat and skipper would be engraved. For the boat, there would be a
weather vane in the shape of a herring, with the year emblazoned upon it, to be
fixed to the fore or mizzen mast.
The first competition ran in the autumn of 1936 and was won
by Boy Andrew BF 592 with 231 crans, with Frons Olive YH 217 as runner-up with
224¼ crans, both landing to Great Yarmouth.
“We got that shot only 16 miles off Lowestoft,” he says. “We
could see the Ness light going round. We’d seen gulls sitting on the water –
the water was white, creamy – and we shot at 5pm, either 91 or 97 nets, can’t
remember, but each 22 yards long – and then we went for tea. But within an
hour, the buffs were logied – they were going under with the weight of fish.
“I was on watch, and I said to the skipper: ‘Our buffs are
logied, bloke.’ We called the skipper ‘bloke’. And he said: ‘What are you
talking about?’ Then he looked and said: ‘Well, we better have a look on…’
“So we started hauling at 6pm, and didn’t finish until 3pm
the next afternoon. That’s how long it took to get them in. There were so many
herring that the middles just dropped out of most of the nets. They couldn’t
take the weight once the herring had died. The whole fleet was spoilt.
“My hands were all bleeding. The capstan did the real heavy
hauling, but then you’ve still got to get the net full of fish over the side.
We’d pull them over. The men had to do that – it was one, two, three and then
boom – you’d haul about four or five inches at a time, trying to get the fish
over the side, and the net would run and run, and you’d be shaking the fish
out.
“And when we got in, we started to unload, but we were
knackered, and they got some other men from somewhere to do it. And we had to
have a new fleet of nets put aboard.”
Rodney came from a fishing family. He had seven brothers and
a sister, and all the brothers went to sea. More particularly, his grandfather,
Archie Durrant – who himself had 14 kids – was a famous Lowestoft owner and
skipper. Rodney didn’t go straight to fishing, because his first job, aged 15,
was with builders’ merchant Jewson. But that didn’t work. “I was there a week
in all the sawdust… I thought: ‘I ain’t doing this.’”
He’d already done one fishing trip on a steam drifter called
Advisable, because his neighbour was chief engineer. He’d been sick as a dog,
but still fancied the job.
“So I cycled down and knocked on his door, and he come out
the bedroom window – he’d been on the beer. And I said: ‘I see you want a spare
hand.’ And he said: ‘How old are ya?’, and I said: ‘Fifteen.’ And he said: ‘He
ya been to sea?’, and I said I’d had a trip on the Advisable. He said: ‘He ya
got a fishing family?’. I said Archie Durrant was my granddad. And he said:
‘That’ll do for me.’
“I had to go to the Yarmouth stores to get my equipment, and you got it on the knock, and the office paid for it out of your wages. We left Lowestoft heading for a 13-week trip fishing out of Aberdeen and Shetland, and it was a steam boat and all gas carbide lamps, and did that stink. And there was a gale of wind – I was so sick it were unreal. We called in at Hartlepool for shelter.
The Silver Crest LT 46 was slightly unusual in that she was a steam boat that had been converted from diesel. She’d been the Larus LT 381, built in 1928 at Selby with a 210hp three-cylinder Plenty diesel, but the engine performance was poor, and in 1929, an Elliott and Garrood triple-expansion steam engine was fitted and she became Silver Crest. She was the last steam drifter to win the trophy.Rodney said: “I was spare hand, and did whatever needed
doing. I’d be stowing the buffs at the end of the haul, and cleaning herring
for the crew to eat. When you’re herring-drifting, you get a few whiting
because they chase the herring, or the odd cod, and they made a change from
herring for breakfast. I used to have to clean 100 herring a day, doing that
while the others all tidied and put away. That’s how many they used to eat.
“I’d be stacking them up to 10 boxes high, about four stone
in each. There was a knack in doing it. We’d take 10 or 11 tons of cobbled ice
to Aberdeen, all in different compartments of the hold. We used to have to chop
it with an axe because it used to go hard on the outside, but inside it was all
loose. You’d get a row of boxes of herring and fling ice all over it, and then
you’d start again.
“And those Scotch girls ashore used to gut one a second, and
get a shilling a bushel. They used to bind their fingers with rags because
they’d be sore with the salt.
“But I also had to go down into the bunkers when the stoker
couldn’t reach the coal and I had to shovel it along. They used to open the
bunker lid up and drop me in, with a shovel and a little carbide duck lamp, and
then screw the lid down. You’d be down there five or six hours. And all you
wore was a pair of pants.
“Two hundred miles out in the Atlantic in a gale of wind,
the coal would be chasing you round. I used to use my hands on the big lumps.
And when you came out, there was no sink or showers or nothing, and you’d have
a bucket of water, and you’d cut a lump of Chester’s carbolic off and wash
yourself, and the chief used to pour the water over your head. There was a lot
of dust down there. That’s why I’ve got COPD.
“The owner, Arthur Catchpole, had two boats the same, the
Silver Seas and Silver Crest, but even though we landed all them herring, at
the end of the season we hadn’t earned enough to pay for the coal. So he pulled
me to one side and give me £2 10s, and this other man stood there with his
peaked cap who had about six little kids, and he give him a fiver.
“After that, 13 weeks off Scotland, we’d come back to
Lowestoft, and for the next fishing we’d go off the Humber, because the herring
were moving south, and then down here off East Anglia for the home fishing.
“I was about a year and a half on Silver Crest. After
Christmas, when all the herring had disappeared, we used to go round to Milford
Haven, longlining for skate and conger, and off Holyhead, going in and out of
those ports. And we fished Morecambe Bay, landing into Fleetwood.
“We also fished off Trevose Head near Padstow, and you’d
find bedsteads and old cars that the mud dredgers used to dump. But the Dover
sole were amazing.
“On my last year of herring fishing, I worked on the
Dauntless Star LT 367, with Georgie Draper as skipper, and he won the trophy in
1959, although I wasn’t with him then. But we broke the Lowestoft port record
in 1960, because in 10 weeks we earned £10,000, and I picked up £80. And I got
married with 100 guests, and they were all saying: ‘How can he afford this
reception at ten bob a head?’ And this Scotsman said: ‘He’s with Georgie
Draper, and he must have picked up 80 to 100 quid.’
“Then I went trawling for a year or two from Lowestoft. I
was on the ‘Queen’ boats – Ormseby Queen, Wroxham Queen, Runham Queen – owned
by the Heptons, father and son, although the boats were crewed and paid through
Boston Deep Sea Fisheries. And didn’t those boats roll. They were all
top-heavy. Even in a flat calm, they had a lazy roll that put the rails under.
And in a gale of wind, well…
“But they weren’t so bad when you got a bit of fish down. We
used to do 12-day trips – Dogger Bank, off Norway, all over the place. As
second engineer, I got one pound and ninepence in the £100 that the boat
earned. If we made £1,000, I got £11, for a 12-day trip. Nearly £1 a day – that
was good money 65 years ago.”
But eventually, Rodney left the fishing for a while. “I
finished in ’63, because my little boy Mark came along, and I’d hardly known my
dad. We hardly saw him, and that weren’t no life for a woman with kids.”
He first went to the Birdseye factory in Lowestoft, and
later on the docks as a seasonal worker and then crane driver, unloading timber
at Boulton Paul.
He eventually sold his fish round to his brother, and spent
the last part of his working life as the landlord of two pubs, the Royal
Standard in Lowestoft, where he got the Innkeeper of the Year award, and then
the Ark Royal in Wells.
And the Prunier Trophy? It ran out of steam not long after
Rodney left fishing. There was no landing submitted in 1965, and it was awarded
for the last time in 1966, when the winning catch, by Tina Ros FR 346, was down
to 128 2/3 crans.
But by that time, Madame Prunier had handed the trophy to
the Herring Industry Board, which subsequently held the award ceremony in
Yarmouth or Lowestoft town hall. She’d done her bit.
This story was taken from the archives of
Fishing News
Genealogy: Rodney
D Forster 1940- is the son of Sydney James Forster 1904-1973 and his father was
Harry Forster 1868-1943 and his father was Samuel Forster 1825-1907 and his
father was Isaac Forster 1801-1890 and his son was Thomas Forster 1837-1888 and
his daughter was Caroline Forster 1864-1906 and her husband was George
"Pikey" William Welch-Adams 1867-1940.
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