Wellfleet Historical Society at the Wellfleet Public Library
Between 1880 and 1900, proceeds from the sale of the fishing rights were enough to pay the salaries of all elected town officials. It is estimated that the successful bidders for the herring fishery rights took about 250,000 herring from the river annually. This illustrated presentation uses old photos and historical maps to show you where the commercial fish station was located at what was a transportation hub near the railroad tracks, at the Herring River, and next to Bound Brook Island Road. Lisbeth Wiley Chapman, a longtime Board Member of Friends of Herring River, has researched the herring fish station in an area where the landscape gives no hints of its once productive past. You will learn why this robust industry died, why the Herring River was diked at Chequessett Neck Road and Duck Harbor, and the impact the diking had on the health of the herring population of Wellfleet's Herring River.
Lisbeth Wiley Chapman Beth created and ran Hopper House Tours from 2013 to 2021. She toured local residents and vistors from around the world to where American artists Edward Hopper and his wife, Josephine, painted in Truro and Wellfleet. She now presents illustrated lectures on the Hoppers and their work in private homes.