Sport Fishing and Hunting Exhibit
Transcription
Sport Fishing and Hunting Exhibit
The Sport Fishing and Hunting Exhibit The Port Aransas Preservation and Historical Association welcomes you to the Port Aransas Museum, and to the panels, objects, and displays of the sport fishing and hunting exhibit. Here is an overview of the exhibit, and a guideline for viewing it. There is commercial fishing, and there is sport fishing. The former is a marine industry geared to providing fish for myriad commercial purposes. Sport fishing, on the other hand, is about relaxation and fun—and sometimes even competition. The long panel above shows the six domains of sport fishing in this area. Commercial fishing Sport fishing While commercial fishing has had—and continues to have—a presence in Port Aransas, sport fishing is unquestionably king. Indeed, it is sport fishing that over a century ago provided the impetus for nothing less than tourism itself, the economic life blood of Port Aransas. The hunting aspect of the exhibit is about recreational (v. commercial—"market") duck hunting. Located in the central flyway, the flats and marshes around Port Aransas are the wintering grounds for untold rafts of redhead, pintail, and bluebill ducks (and others as well). That there is more "fishing" than "hunting" in this exhibit, reflects the greater economic and historical salience of fishing to this community. Market hunting A future recreational duck hunter dreams big! Our sport fishing and hunting histories, narrated and illustrated in chronological order, are presented in panels like this one. The panels begin to your immediate right, then around the second corner (by the hallway), down the long wall, and end on the wall behind you. A Fishing Paradise Found The big revelation about Mustang Island fishing, however, began in 1880 when mainlanders arrived to construct the Aransas Pass jetties. These men noticed huge schools of tarpon in the pass. Because it fights so mightily when hooked, the tarpon is a prime sport fish. Soon the jetty people were paying islanders to row them to the pass to fish. "Fishing guide" became a vocation on Mustang Island, and the growing relevance of sport fishing to the local economy led to an 1886 hostelry being called the Tarpon Inn. A decade later, the town itself took “Tarpon” for its name. Timothy Vought was hired in 1875 to stay at the nearby lighthouse and do repair work. On his days off, Timothy, an avid fisherman, found himself in a virtual paradise: "I never saw fish so thick." In fact, during his stay he took so many fish—mainly redfish and black drum—that he wrote his wife, "Getting sick of the sight of fish." Vought's words (see below) are the first known descrip-tions of the extraordinary sport fishing in this area. Constructing the jetties. Stellar fishing was first revealed close to the Lydia Ann lighthouse. Constructing the jetties. Tarpon Club on San José Island, 1901. Excerpts from Timothy Vought’s letters. Guide rowing party in the Aransas Pass amid the jetty construction. The reputation of Tarpon, Texas, spread. Soon, a Mr. Ned Green came to fish the local waters. The tarpon so awed this wealthy New Yorker, that by 1899 he had built a palatial structure on the tip of San José Island, just across the Aransas Pass from Tarpon. Green dubbed his creation the Tarpon Club, a member-ship venue where the standard was set by culinary dishes to satisfy even the keenest gourmet. Of course, members hired islanders as fishing and hunting (waterfowl) guides. The New York Times published articles about the Ta r p o n C l u b t h a t b r o u g h t e v e n international attention to Mustang Island and its little com-munity of Tarpon. (The name “Port Aransas" was adopted in 1910.) Technology Aids the Guides A rowing guide and his party relax after landing a good size tarpon. Rowing or sailing parties to, and then around, the tarpon grounds, a distance exceeding four miles, was a tedious and laborious task for the guides. The advent of small powerboats after the turn of the 20th century greatly increased the efficiency of the guide business. Another fishing asset wrought by technology was the drag equipped reel. (Drag is tension on the fishing line needed to stop a fish from pulling out all the line.) On a drag equipped reel, line tension is increased or decreased simply by turning a little wheel. Before that innova-tion, amount of drag was physically managed by pressing one's thumb—protected by a leather flap—against the spool of line, an imprecise and fatiguing procedure. Early on, there were few powerboats available. Here (c. 1910), Ed Cotter shows the smart application of his powerboat by pulling 16 fishing boats to the tarpon grounds. (The famous Tarpon Inn is in the background.} Some guides even sailed parties to the tarpon grounds at the end of the jetties. The Port Aransas Boatmen Tarpon fishing in the Aransas Pass, which eventually expanded to bay and offshore fishing, created a number of boatmen and guides. In 1932, these individuals came together as the Port Aransas Boatmen’s Association to regulate the guide fee structure and to become involved in community projects. To finance such endeavors, the Boatmen organized fishing tournaments, the most famous being the Tarpon Rodeo and later the Deep Sea Roundup. A large and ambitious project was in 1949 when the Boatmen spearheaded the construction of the Community Center, which became the center of social life in Port Aransas— much as it is today. The Boatmen, now with the moniker Port Aransas Boatmen Inc., are still active. In addition to sponsoring the Deep Sea Roundup, they serve as consultants on the protection and conservation of saltwater fishing. And they also continue to be an important community asset; indeed, some of the Boatmen whose forefathers built the Community Center were involved in its massive 2009 renovation. “Court” of a Tarpon Rodeo tournament. Boatmen building the Community Center, 1949. Tournament class sailfish flanked by two fine tarpon. Those Fabulous Farley Boats Charles Frederick—Fred—Farley was a master craftsman. Based in Alabama, Fred worked the Gulf coast in the early 1900s repairing, designing, and building any number of things: wharves, lighthouses, utility boats…even ornate saloon bar tops. Fred’s brother Jim had moved to Port Aransas, from which he sent Fred word that the fishing guides in this "world headquarters of tarpon fishing" were looking for well designed, fairly priced powerboats to practice their trade more proficiently. Sensing an economic opportunity, Fred Farley came to town in 1915 to build boats. Built initially from top-grade cypress —and later select Honduran and Philippine mahogany, the Farley and Sons Boat Works turned out the Cadillacs of coastal fishing boats. In addition to the aesthetic Farley lines, no boat handled this area's incessantly choppy water better than a Farley; and the Farley freeboard—side height—was just right to allow guides to boat their catches safely and efficiently. Guides wharf and the omnipotent Farley boats. Farley boats were built from sketches drawn on the factory floor. Farley boats were known for smoothing out choppy water. The most historic VIP to go aboard a Farley boat was Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Inside the Farley Boat Works.The sleek hull is of a craft built for a member of the Borden dairy dynasty. Farley boats were not “cookie cut” nor built from traditional marine architectural plans. After listening to the customer's specifications, Fred Farley drew the corresponding craft on the floor of the shop and then worked from that rendering— the "computer" was in the heads of this skilled craftsman and the people he trained. After six decades of premier boat building, the Farley operation ceased in 1975. Tarpon Rodeo Barney Farley’s revolver started the Tarpon Rodeo. Barney Farley, a Boatman, and newspaper man, to capitalize on fishing. Port Aransas businessman and Fred Kinsolving, a Corpus realized a way for Port Aransas the great popularity of tarpon The gunshot brought a “Keystone cops” departure from the dock. Barney and Fred organized and staged a competitive tarpon fishing tournament based in Port Aransas. The money from the competitors' entry fees was used to fund community projects. The Tarpon Rodeo tourna-ment began in 1932, making it the first fishing tournament on the Texas coast. The tournament involved the whole town. This tail walker, and the leaper below, show why the tarpon, the “silver king,” is a premier sport fish. Regretfully, the tarpon began leaving area waters some time after World War II. There are various hypothesis of why that happened, among them being natural migration and the Mexicans dynamiting close by tarpon waters to gather fish as fodder for their fertilizer plants. So spotty did the once world class tarpon fishing become, that the Tarpon Rodeo was dissolved after the 1958 tournament. Happily, there has been a recent resurgence of tarpon, the fishing for which is now strictly on a catch-and-release basis. Just holding the Tarpon Rodeo tournament trophy brings a big smile. President Roosevelt Comes to Port Aransas In the heyday of the tarpon era, Franklin Delano Roosevelt came here to fish. While the President could have learned about little Port A through the sports media, FDR had a much more personal connection to the town: His son Elliott had tarpon fished here and gave his father a glowing report. In short order, the President, an avid fisherman, laid plans to fish the waters of Port Aransas, Texas. Elliott Roosevelt (left) had discovered Port A’s world class tarpon fishing. On 29 April 1937, the President and his party left New Orleans aboard the destroyer USS Moffet (escorted by another destroyer, USS Decatur.) The President's ship arrived and stood off the Aransas Pass on May 1st. A boat was launched and FDR and his party began fishing. Later in the afternoon, the presidential yacht USS Potomac, a converted Coast Guard vessel, arrived, and the effects of the VIPs were transferred to her. (Potomac’s rear smoke stack was bogus, hiding the mechanism of the elevator that permitted the wheelchair bound President to move between decks.) USS Moffet USS Decatur Potomac anchored just northeast of Port Aransas. Off her bow and stern lie the lighthouse and San José Island, respectively. FDR Goes After the Fish On the 2nd and 3rd of M a y, 1 9 3 7 , t h e President, fished by local guides, went for tarpon and kingfish by the jetties. On the 4th, Potomac cruised south to Port Isabel for the President to trout fish. Potomac returned to Port A the next day, and the tarpon fishing recommenced. FDR with one of his smaller tarpon. The men in the bow are Secret Service agents. Clockwise from seated FDR: Mathews, Elliott, Farley, and the “big one.” FDR boated a couple of small tarpon (see below left), but was luckless on hooking the bigger fish…that is until the closing moments of the trip. On the last hour of the last fishing day (May 8th}, the President tied into his big tarpon. This happy and well documented event occurred in the company of Elliott and local guides Teddy Mathews and Barney Farley (aboard Teddy's boat). The fish was 5 feet 1 inch long, and weighed 77 pounds. The tarpon’s real distinction is being such an immortalized and “presidential” fish! At 10 o'c lock the next mor ning, Potomac steamed FDR away from his week of fishing the Texas coast. A good time was had by all! And the press pulls up to capture the moment. The FDR Legacy Mr. Roosevelt's seven days off Port Aransas—Potomac anchored within sight of the lighthouse—were not all about fishing; after all, he was one of our busiest presidents. When not wetting a hook, FDR tended to governmental business; but certainly the most historic message he sent from Port Aransas waters did not go to Washington...it went to Nazi Germany. Regarding the May 6th Hindenburg disaster, FDR sent, "My deepest sympathies," to Chancellor Adolf Hitler. A persistent myth is that Mr. Roosevelt stayed at the Tarpon Inn. Not true. In fact, so not to reveal his wheelchair condition (FDR was crippled by polio), the President did not come onto Mustang Island at all—but he briefly visited with townsfolk at the waterfront aboard Teddy Mathews boat (sans wheelchair). FDR did go ashore on private San José Island for a party in his honor hosted by oil man Sid Richardson, the island owner. Franklin D. Roosevelt coming here was, of course, a publicity gold mine for the town: the trip was covered by both Time and Life. And while the effects of that are now long over, the FDR 1937 fishing trip remains a red letter event in Port Aransas history. Tanned from his week of fishing, the President visits with folks at the Port A docks. Privately owned San Island fades into northern horizon. (Port south of the Aransas waterway.) José the A is Pass The most famous tarpon scale displayed at the Tarpon Inn. Deep Sea Roundup Not all fishermen were intrigued with the tarpon. A number of sportsmen came to Port Aransas to fish for the exquisitely beautiful sailfish and the hard charging blue marlin, both swimming in waters deeper and further offshore than the tarpon grounds. To accommodate these deep sea fishermen, the Port Aransas Boatmen in 1941 instituted a competitive fishing tournament they named the Deep Sea Roundup (which ran concurrently with the Tarpon Rodeo until it—the rodeo—was disbanded in 1958). So successful did the Roundup become, that the Boatmen expanded the competition to include (among other categories) bay and surf fishing, as well as a category for young anglers. Held in July, the Deep Sea Roundup is a, if not the, annual Port A event—not to mention being a fishing tournament of national prominence. Future Deep Sea Roundup competitors. Future Deep Sea Roundup competitors. Ecstatic sailfish division winner. Ecstatic sailfish division winner. A tournament class sailfish. In the background is a Sport Fisherman offshore boat. A blue marlin at weigh in. The Outboards Arrive One of the consequences of the great technological advances of World War II was the more reliable outboard motor. That, coupled with lightweight aluminum and fiberglass hulls, gave rise to a reasonably priced fishing machine that was easy to transport (by trailer), relatively simple and cheap to operate, and required minimal maintenance. The outboard boat invasion hit Port Aransas in the 1950s, and it has not slowed down. "Invasion" is the appropriate term for two reasons. Firstly, people launching their own outboards in search of the fish left local guides in their Farley boats sitting at the dock, an economic downside for the Boat-men. Secondly, the outboard boat draws so little water that people began operating them in the shallow bay flats where fish feed, loiter, and reproduce. The propellers made a racket as they cut great swaths through the delicate flats flora; and predictably, the redfish and trout began to scatter. (The state has now designated "no prop" zones, but enforcement is, at best, difficult.) What is missing in this 1960s Port A fishing image? The fishing guide. The outboard boat left him on the dock. How-ever with the increasing popularity of fishing, the guide business has experienced a healthy recovery. Despite stiff opposition to outboard boats by some townsfolk, it boiled down to simple economics: The outboard crowd bought too much gas, bait, beer, and ice to be turned away. In fact, outboards were finally celebrated by the Port Aransas Outboard Fishing Tournament, first held in 1975. Despite being a certified challenge to shallow water fauna and flora, the outboard motor boat is here to stay. Scooped out keel and elevated motor let the “tunnel drive” boat run in water a foot deep. This is the type of boat that leaves a big footprint in the shallow bay flats. The boat launch slots of the city marina were designed expressly for launching and retrieving outboard motor boats. Fish Stories No fishing exhibit would be complete without a few fish stories. Let us start with one from Mr. Teddy Mathews, Port Aransas fishing guide and bayman par excellence. ___In his 1930s field journal, Teddy wrote that after his party hooked a vigorously fighting six footer, “the tarpon came directly toward the boat, leaped up across the stern and landed on top of Dr. Sutton, knocking him to the deck, almost breaking his neck. The doctor suffered from this injury long thereafter.” (Dr. Sutton recovered sufficiently to write a popular book on tarpon fishing.) ___September, 1955. In his 24 foot Farley boat, John Wootters and two of his friends (all from Houston) are trolling for kingfish about a mile off the Port Aransas beach. Suddenly from the depths broaches a huge creature that begins swimming right beside the boat. It is a shark, longer than the boat and having a girth of six feet—the four foot dorsal fin is twice as high as the side of the boat. The men are gripped with fear. John later writes, “It was an immense feeling of total helpless-ness. You have to understand what will seem unbelievable, the creature’s eye was the size of my head! The shark kept knocking the boat—bash, bash, bash— with that pointed snout, like he was testing its edibility. (In fact, two splintered hull planks had to be replaced.) This fish could have easily swamped us with a tail slap. I knew we would not see tomorrow, so I told my friends to pray, which they did...out loud.” Thankfully, the fish dove back to the depths without incident. John had no camera aboard, but he had Harris County Judge T.S. Hopkins take his and his passengers’ eyewitness affidavits which he then sent to the American Museum of Natural History. The museum declined to speculate on the species of shark that John and his friends had observed, but the Wootter fish was entered as one of the largest fish reported in American waters. Unforgetably impressed by the monster's pointed conical nose, John, an internationally celebrated offshore fisherman, was absolutely sure that he had not witnessed a whale shark, the consensus candidate; rather, John swore to have seen Carcharodon carcharias, a great white shark, a very rare event in the Gulf of Mexico...and right when you thought it was safe to go back in the water! ___A wade fisherman watched a pair of dolphins swim toward him—he could see their dorsal fins breaking the surface. All of a sudden, one began jumping in the air and doing all sorts of antics in front of the fisherman. Fixated on this spectacle, the fellow did not notice the other dolphin dart in and jerk the stringer full of specked trout right off his belt; whereupon the thief rejoined his companion, the pair zooming away with their tasty heist. There was no doubt in the fisherman's mind that this coordinated "detract and attack" hunting tactic showed evidence of an advanced mental capacity. The fishing exhibit closes with a truism. The fishin' is always good. It's the catchin' that comes and goes. The high leaping tarpon landed squarely in the boat. The “antics” dolphin held the fishermanʼs attention. Waterfowl Hunting In addition to premier sport fishing, Port Aransas offered superb waterfowl hunting. Thousands of acres of shallow water sustained a huge population of wintering ducks. Indeed, when the fishing slowed in December, the town guides changed hats by putting away rod and reel and reaching for their decoys and 12 gauge shotguns. The guide's drill was to tow the duck boat, a small dinghy, behind a powerboat. On arriving at the desired flats, the client transferred to the dinghy which the guide then rowed or walked to the hide—the blind. (Decoys were typically set the preceding evening.) The hide was called a "boat blind" because the dinghy was pulled directly into it; that is, one hunted out of the hidden boat itself. Before daily kill limits, hunters took an extraordinary number of ducks in this area. A guide once recorded that in one day his client shot 157. A guide picks up his decoys at day’s end. The blind is in the background. The images show the past and present of coastal waterfowl hunting. The airboat has replaced the towed duck boat. Guides now whisk their hunters from dock to blind in one step, and the hides are floored platforms rather than pull-in boat blinds. The gentlemen at the left hold a brace of twenty-one ducks, which current limit law would not allow. Labrador retriever Susan Ford supervises her human as he sets decoys on a fog shrouded morning at Mud Island. The “dekes” are molded, store bought,forms; seventy years ago they were hand carved wood blocks. What has not changed over the ages is the thrill of watching a flight of pintails drop toward the decoys, the wind whistling through their wing feathers. An archetypical moment of the highest quality.