The town of Solomons, on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Calvert County,
Md., was once the center of a flourishing community based on commercial fishing and
boat-building. Over the last thirty years, however, development has greatly altered the
structure of the region's economy. An influx of suburbanites who live in the county and
commute to jobs in Baltimore, Annapolis, and Washington, D.C. has driven up prices and
created a "conflict of cultures" between new residents and old. Pollution has
contributed to a decline in the productivity of the Bay and its tributaries, forcing many
watermen out of business. In the words of one old-time fisherman, the heart of a
"real watertown" has been converted into "two blocks of nothing but solid
junk shops." Today, there are probably fewer than twenty working watermen in Calvert
County.
On Maryland's Eastern Shore, small-scale commercial fishing is still viable and
watertowns are, relatively speaking, intact. Most of the Eastern Shore is too far from
major metropolitan areas to be transformed into the next suburban frontier. Yet the
region faces intense development pressures, from second-home construction and recreational
tourism, at a time when many of the traditional uses of the land and the Bay have become
less viable economically. As one waterman predicted, "We're going the way of the
whaling fleets of North America."
Americans are used to paying bittersweet homage to occupations rendered obsolete by
advancing technology and changing tastes. But while communities sometimes rally to keep
the last shoeshine men or arabbers in business, such efforts are usually ad hoc attempts
to hold onto a dying past a little longer, and rarely the harbinger of a deliberate policy
of preservation.
Similarly, Americans cherish their rural land- and seascapes, yet until recently they
have surrendered them to the onslaught of progress and development. Unlike magnificent and
supposedly "pristine" natural areas, such as the Grand Canyon and Yosemite
Valley, farmland and coastal fisheries were not set aside in preserves. While local
communities would often resist the loss of farms or working harbors to subdivisions or
waterfront condos, these protests, too, had an ad hoc character; in the absence of any
principled basis for preservation, they appeared to be little more than futile,
self-interested pleas to be spared from the development that was occurring everywhere
else.
Over the past two decades, however, the environmental movement has come to recognize
that some rural landscapes, especially farmland, have a beauty and harmony distinct from,
but not inferior to, that of wilderness areas (the historic focus of preservation
efforts). At the same time, environmentalists have developed a new appreciation for rural
vocations. Such vocations are instrumentally valuable in protecting landscapes that bear
the stamp of human habitation; there may be no more effective way to preserve open space
in developing areas than to preserve farming. Just as influential, though perhaps less
explicitly, is a belief that these vocations are intrinsically valuable, an inherent part
of the landscape which environmentalists seek to preserve. If tilled fields and terraced
hillsides have significant aesthetic, cultural, and moral value, so do the activities of
tilling, planting, and harvesting.
Several jurisdictions, including Maryland, have recently adopted a host of legal and
regulatory mechanisms, many borrowed from Great Britain, to protect farmers' holdings and
thus preserve the rural landscape. Under Smart Growth and Rural Legacy legislation, the
state attempts to slow development in rural areas and redirect it to older urban and
suburban areas. These laws empower state and local authorities to purchase conservation
easements from farmers and allow third parties to purchase farmers' development rights for
use elsewhere. In both cases, the laws limit the subdivision of farmland while providing
capital for farming operations.
Smart Growth and Rural Legacy policies have not yet been directed toward watermen. In
part, this is because the watermen's relationship with valued environments is more
ambiguous and complex than that of farmers. What constitutes a waterman's holding? The
stretch of the Bay or the tributary he uses most frequently? His boats, rigging, traps,
and docks? His share of watertown life and community? All three seem necessary to maintain
watermen on the Bay, but it isn't clear which of these can or should be the focus of
preservation efforts. Moreover, watermen cannot be made into conservators of the rural
landscape by the same means as farmers. For example, watermen rarely have land or other
real property that is coveted by developers -- assets that can be preserved by easements
or transferred development rights.
The watermen's work has long been subject to a regulatory regime, but one with a very
different orientation. These regulations are informed by a conservationist ethic that
seeks to maintain natural resources for human sustenance and convenience; their goal is to
enhance the long-term productivity of watermen through limits on their catch size and
fishing seasons. (Many watermen have, perhaps shortsightedly, opposed such regulations.)
The new policies, in contrast, express a preservationist ethic: they seek to maintain
rural livelihoods not for their economic yield, but for the way of life they represent.
Although these policies haven't yet been adapted to commercial fishing, there is a
growing recognition that the watermen's livelihood is an integral part of what is worth
preserving in America's coastal areas. "To me," writes Bill Goldsborough, the
principal fisheries scientist from the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, "one of the main
reasons that you want to save the Bay is to maintain the watermen's culture, the
watermen's way of life. . . . Without them, if you just imagine Chesapeake Bay
without any commercial fishing activity, it's really kind of a sterile body of
water." In much the same spirit, Tom Horton worries that "much faster, and more
irreversibly than we are losing our water quality on the Chesapeake, we are losing our
human diversity."
Horton's remark suggests another source of the impulse to preserve traditional
livelihoods: a concern for diversity that encompasses watermen as much as farmers. The
lives and work of watermen would seem to possess several qualities that have become
increasingly rare in post-industrial America: an intimate involvement with the natural
features of the landscape, a direct connection between work and sustenance, and a high
degree of personal autonomy. If, however, we seek to preserve commercial fishing for the
sake of human diversity, we need to examine whether the watermen really do possess a
distinctive culture, or whether the portrait of watermen as hardy, self-reliant
subsistence workers is merely a romantic anachronism. We must ask, too, whether any
qualities and attitudes that set the watermen apart are likely to conflict with a
preservationist agenda. It may be that the relevant tools of public policy are ones that
the watermen themselves are reluctant to employ even for their own apparent benefit, or
that policies intended to sustain the watermen's culture would in fact subvert it.
This essay offers a sketch of some of the values and experiences that appear central to
the watermen's self-conception, drawing on recent interviews and focus-group meetings in
Calvert and St. Mary's Counties. Its purpose is to provide some understanding of how the
watermen see themselves, what they cherish in their work, and how they understand the
forces that threaten it. Combining ethnography with environmental ethics, we have tried to
see whether the differences in perspective and lifestyle between watermen and the dominant
culture are really as large, and as important, as one might suppose, and whether certain
legislative and regulatory strategies are appropriate for preserving what is truly
distinctive in their way of life.
Nature and Human Activity
It is their interactions with nature that would seem most likely to distinguish the
watermen from their new neighbors and, more generally, from those in the economic
mainstream of late twentieth-century America. Watermen on the Chesapeake typically begin
their involvement with the Bay and the shoreside environment at a very early age. Many of
their earliest memories have to do with the past abundance of various fish species in the
Bay, and the clarity of the water before the effects of pollution began to be felt in the
1960s. Fishing for both profit and food was much easier then; children could take part and
keep some or all of the money they earned. (From the watermen's point of view, the
children of newcomers to the Chesapeake region seem strangely disconnected from the adult
world -- unable to share in the work that their parents do, and acquainted hardly at all
with the life of the Bay.)
The sources of value in the watermen's work and memories are not limited to the
material gain they enjoyed from their fishing activities, nor to the romantic experience
of communing with nature. Instead, the watermen's scheme of valuation combines the two.
One of the men we met remembers seeing so many eels on a river bottom "that they
look[ed] like wheat grass in the field out there." With equal acuity, another recalls
rising at four in the morning to catch the eels, which were then shipped to Baltimore in
"great big giant wooden barrels." Aesthetic and practical interests are
unself-consciously conjoined. Similarly, when the watermen talk of the simple beauty of
caught fish and shellfish, tied into this beauty is their knowledge that the catch is
valuable.
While acknowledging the physical demands of their vocation, the watermen also express
an appreciation for the peace and quiet of work on the Bay. These aesthetic satisfactions
of fishing are closely linked to the independence of the job; as one focus-group member
explained, "You have nobody there with a hatchet over your head, telling you when
you've got to do this, when you've got to do that." Nor is one bothered by co-workers
"whining" that they aren't paid enough for their labor. Instead, there is a
shared understanding that the harder a waterman works, the more he earns: "Look, you
swing these shafts, or you pull that net a little bit harder, and you'll make a little bit
more money." A fishing party that catches some bluefish can "see the gains right
there."
Speaking more abstractly, we can say that the watermen make little distinction between
beauty and utility, or even between nature and human activity. They value the Bay not only
as a source of bounty and delight, but also as a source of independence; its beauty is
closely linked with their own sense of autonomy and agency as they wrest their living from
it. Many environmentalists also value interaction with nature, but they tend to see
themselves as respectful outsiders, venturing into alien territory and leaving nothing but
footprints. The watermen are considerably more familiar, and less constrained. Yet they
are never guilty of seeing the Bay merely as an exploitable resource.
Vernacular Libertarianism
For all their concern about new threats to their way of life, the watermen are
reluctant even to discuss policies to control development and in-migration. They cherish
their own freedom and are reluctant to consider government restrictions on individual
economic activity (although they often accept social restrictions on other
individual activities -- for example, on the amount of time spent each day fishing, on
children's behavior, or, on Smith Island, on drinking in some settings.) This deep
libertarian streak makes watermen suspicious of government intervention of any kind. They
regard government oversight as a "hatchet" which they are reluctant to wield
against anyone else, even those whose affluence and greed threaten their survival.
Americans are often libertarian when it comes to their own liberty interests; what is
striking about the watermen is the consistency with which they apply their philosophy.
This vernacular libertarianism is reinforced by a strong fatalism, which sees both the
decline of the fisheries and the spread of development as inevitable. "There's a lot
of stuff you can't do nothing about," one waterman explained. Development "is
just like a big shark. . . . It's got a big mouth on it and it just keeps eating up
anybody in its way." In general, the watermen do not perceive development as a direct
or indirect effect of government policy; they do not recognize the state's hand in the
proliferation of new homes on the land and leisure craft on the water. Thus, they tend to
view curbs on development as a simple denial of access to the Bay, which they oppose,
rather than as an effort to undo or redress the effects of past government intervention on
behalf of development, which they might find easier to accept. In their view, restricting
the influx of tourists and migrants would not only be unfair, but futile as well.
Historically, there is one threat -- pollution -- against which the watermen have
been willing to support regulation. Tom Horton notes that in the 1880s, during their
industry's prime, Chesapeake oystermen used their political clout to force Baltimore to
construct the nation's most modern sewage treatment plant to protect water quality in the
Bay. Today, however, less and less of the Bay's pollution comes from point sources like
the Baltimore municipal sewer system, more and more from the sediment and chemical run-off
of an increasingly developed, impermeable watershed. But while the watermen clearly
recognize the connection between development and pollution, they do not seize on that
connection to justify restrictions on the former.
Status and Authenticity
Each of the watermen we met was intensely aware of his relative standing in his own
community. Status comes with age and experience and long residence in the place one was
born to. A tone of formality and mutual respect pervades their conversations; for
instance, absent or deceased watermen are often referred to as "captain," the
title given by watermen to the working owner of a fishing vessel. In a gathering of
watermen from a county such as St. Mary's, all the participants know each other well. In
speaking of difficult issues, they look to one another for support and confirmation.
In the communities of the Chesapeake, there is a clear sense of what it means to be a
"real" waterman. In conversation, the men are exceedingly careful in describing
their lineage and work experience, always mentioning any feature of their history that
might qualify their right to the title of waterman. (One focus-group participant had
migrated to the area as a young man, and so couldn't claim a familial tie to the trade;
another had grown up on a farm.) Although at least two of the men had been to college,
neither touched on that part of his life, except once in passing.
To be sure, being a genuine waterman isn't the only path to status and respect. The
oldest participant in the group had "taken to the shipyards" in his youth and
become a master carver. At times he sounded apologetic about this, admitting that he had
never had the physical stamina for life on the water. But he also made sure to mention
that he had operated a charter boat for two summers and thus "got to know what the
Bay was all about." The other members deferred to him and acknowledged his seniority
in their community. Another participant, the one with the widest experience of the world
outside the Bay, gave a full account of his working life, as if to establish his authority
to speak on various matters. He became the unofficial leader of the group, and the
majority of questions and comments by the other watermen were directed to him.
The watermen's notions of status and authenticity help to explain why they are so
offended at the assertiveness of wealthy professionals who have moved into the Bay region.
For example, in the live-and-let-live watertown economy of the past, the untidiness of
commercial fishing operations troubled no one. The nets and rusty gear that lay around the
yards and landings were taken for granted; so was the noise of boats and trucks starting
up in the early morning. But the newcomers often arrive with the expectation that they
have purchased a kind of idyllic rural serenity, and complain to local authorities when
this is diminished. They may also expect to catch oysters and crabs for recreation, and
blame local watermen for "overfishing" -- a phrase the watermen detest -- when
these are found to be scarce. Some of the new residents may actually be motivated by a
kind of preservationist sentiment. But to the "real" watermen, the newcomers'
sense of what is worth preserving is hopelessly sanitized and inauthentic. Moreover, the
fact that some new residents have rapidly gained sufficient political power to impose
their ideas of rurality on the watermen and their operations violates a traditional
understanding of how authority is acquired and exercised in these communities.
The Preservationist Challenge
This sketch of the watermen's lifestyle and self-understanding suggests that their
culture is indeed distinctive. But it also suggests that their culture is highly
vulnerable, and that the very qualities that set it apart may also make it resistant to
preservationist strategies.
Preserving livelihoods is a more complicated business than preserving natural
landscapes. Ecologists have long cautioned that even the simplest interventions in nature
have complex and often unanticipated effects. The complexity and uncertainty are greater
when the object of preservation is a human activity. The agents may not accept the
preservationists' means or share their values; alternatively, the very attempt at
preservation may transform the character of their work in ways inconsistent with what they
value in it. We have noted that the watermen are reluctant even to discuss, let alone
request, government restrictions on the kind of development they see as threatening their
way of life. Admittedly, their cooperation would not be necessary to impose limits on
development. But a culture that values personal freedom so highly might be compromised if
it were heavily dependent on coercive state action for its survival.
Subsidies may be even more subversive than restrictions. Many watermen understand the
worth of their vocation as inhering in their confrontation with the hardships and caprices
of nature; its beauty and dignity lie in the watermen's struggle to sustain themselves and
their families from the life forms around them. As we have seen, the aesthetic
satisfactions of their work are conjoined with a sense of the immediate benefits they
derive from the Bay. A program of subsidies would attenuate the connection between nature
and subsistence. The result might be what Erving Goffman calls the "keying" of
an activity from one frame to another -- from natural to social, from hunting-gathering to
performance. A waterman kept in business by protectors of his vocation may be doing
something of value, but he is no longer wresting a living from the sea.
Some environmental ethicists argue that the very decision to preserve or designate a
wilderness area renders it an artifact. This seems a bit overstated -- after all, the
rocks and rivers go about their business despite the designation, and so do the animals,
as long as the tourists resist feeding them. But preserving a community's way of life is a
different matter, and the claim that the act of preservation is self-defeating seems far
more plausible for culture than for nature. When the state keeps watermen in business
because it values their activity rather than their catch, those watermen are no longer
working for themselves or their customers, but for a broader public.
Of course, any new policies would seek to keep farmers and watermen in business as
producers, not performers. But if a dwindling proportion of their income actually comes
from the sale of crops or catch, and if the purpose of the subsidies that make up the
difference is not to yield larger harvests or catches but to maintain the activity of
farming or fishing, then the transformation from producer to performer may be inevitable.
The farmers and millers at restored Acolonial@ villages may actually sell their products to
tourists, but they do not make a living from those sales. A person paid to engage in a
traditional activity that can no longer be justified in economic terms, by a society that
values the activity itself, has arguably become a reenactor, even if it is his own past
life he is reenacting. Given the watermen's intense concern with authenticity, such a
performance might seem particularly demeaning.
Yet the transformation of watermen into performers has already begun without direct
state intervention to preserve their communities and livelihoods. Although the watermen
speak of themselves as a dying breed, insisting that they would rather move on or retire
than change their way of living, they have adapted to new circumstances. One waterman we
met has turned his skipjack into a floating classroom; others crew on charter boats. In
one respect, this transformation is encouraging. It will keep some of the more
enterprising watermen on the Bay, whatever the state of the fishery or the local economy.
Moreover, the transformation of watermen into educators may well give future generations a
deeper appreciation of their natural and social history than they would otherwise have.
But museum talks and educational boat trips offer no opportunity for the kind of grueling,
exhilarating encounters with nature that have enriched the watermen's own lives.
Some might draw a harsher conclusion -- that the preservation of watermen on these
terms would be a fraud, an historical-restoration-without-walls that owed much of its
appeal to ignorance or self-deception about what the watermen were actually up to. It may
show more respect for the watermen to let them die out, as they often threaten to do; a
living memorial may be less dignified.
Perhaps, however, there are less subversive ways of preserving the livelihoods of
watermen, ways that would maintain the connection to hunting and gathering on which the
integrity of their work depends. Price supports for local fish harvested by traditional
methods might well offend the watermen's sense of independence, but by placing added value
directly on the catch, they might preserve the character of the watermen's work as
resource extraction, while evincing a social recognition of its dignity and worth. Perhaps
the state could also support the watermen less directly, by promoting the kind of consumer
demand for traditionally produced local products that has created a cottage industry in
organic and boutique farming. This demand could be met by a new generation of
"craft" fishermen whose catch would be sold at premium prices at upscale
markets. While the demand for the local may express a patronizing enthusiasm for the yield
of an idealized rural economy, it might sustain some watermen in their traditional
vocations without the heavy hand of direct government subsidy.
Finally, greater efforts at pollution control offer the possibility of enhancing the
productivity of the Chesapeake Bay, and of restoring some of the abundance that figured so
prominently in the watermen's attachment to the environment of their youth. Such a policy
would advance the conservationist tradition while addressing more recent preservationist
concerns. Environmental protection -- the end that was to be served by maintaining rural
vocations -- would itself become a means of keeping those vocations alive.
-- David Wasserman and Mick Womersley
The research described in this article was funded by Maryland Sea Grant and the
National Science Foundation, SBR 9422322; Mick Womersley is a Maryland Sea Grant Trainee.
The authors are grateful to Jack Greer, Merrill Leffler, and Michael Fincham of Maryland
Sea Grant for their support and guidance; to Larissa Grunnig for conducting the focus
groups with great skill and sensitivity; and to Sara Gottlieb for her valuable
contribution to the early stages of this project. Sources: Tom Horton, An Island Out of
Time: A Memoir of Smith Island in the Chesapeake (W.W. Norton, 1996); Carolyn Ellis, Fisher
Folk: Two Communities on Chesapeake Bay (University Press of Kentucky, 1986); Todd
Shields, "Bay's Toxic Contributors: Survey Says Smaller Sources Playing a Bigger
Role," Washington Post (April 10, 1997); Erving Goffman, Frame Analysis
(Harper & Row, 1974).