Oyster pirate

Oyster pirates on the Chesapeake Bay in 1884

Oyster pirate is a name given to persons who engage in the poaching of oysters. It was a term that became popular on both the west and east coasts of the United States in the nineteenth century.

San Francisco Bay oyster pirates and the works of Jack London

The term "oyster pirate" appeared in several literary works by Jack London. London usually used the term without explanation ("I wanted to be where the winds of adventure blew. And the winds of adventure blew the oyster pirate sloops up and down San Francisco Bay").[1] Writers about London also use the term without explanation ("he was a sailor, seal-hunter, tramp, fish warden, oyster pirate, cannery worker, jailbird, boxer, and gold digger"[2]), as if everyone knew the meaning of the term.

In the context of Jack London's life, it refers to a specific set of conditions peculiar to the oyster industry in San Francisco Bay in the 1880s. While San Francisco Bay had a native oyster (the same species found elsewhere on the Pacific Coast), it was never very abundant. By the early 1850s, entrepreneurs began importing oysters from Shoalwater Bay (now Willapa Bay), Washington Territory. Native West coast oysters were much smaller and had a different flavor than those from the East coast. When the transcontinental railroad was completed, large fishery companies in the east sold juvenile oysters to San Francisco entrepreneurs who purchased submerged land from the State of California and grew oysters from transplanted Eastern stock.[3]

By the 1880s the handful of competing oyster companies began consolidating into a single monopoly.[4] Their harvest of a private commodity from a public space, the San Francisco Bay, led to an opportunity for oyster pirates. Pirates raided the oyster beds at night and sold their take in the Oakland markets in the morning. The public disliked the Southern Pacific and the oyster growers, and liked cheap oysters. As a result, the oyster pirates had considerable public sympathy and police were reluctant to take action against them.[5]

Jack London described oyster piracy in his autobiographical "alcoholic memoirs", John Barleycorn, in the form of romanticized juvenile fiction in The Cruise of the Dazzler, and from the opposing point of view of the California Fish Patrol in "A Raid on the Oyster Pirates," from Tales of the Fish Patrol. Oyster pirating was also listed as one of London's first occupations after leaving a cannery at the age of fifteen by Abraham Rothberg in an Introduction to The Great Adventure Stories of Jack London (1967) and by Eric Hanson in A Book of Ages (2008).

East Coast and Chesapeake Bay oyster pirates

Oyster pirates also operated on the east coast of the United States beginning in the 18th century. These disputes often focused on increased privatization of what had been public rights, providing an obvious inspiration for later West Coast activities.[6] Oyster pirates also appeared in the Chesapeake Bay, especially from the second half of the nineteenth century into the twentieth century during the Oyster Wars.[7]

See also

References

  1. John Barleycorn, Chapter VII
  2. John J. Ross, Shakespeare's Tremor and Orwell's Cough: The Medical Lives of Famous Writers, Macmillan, 2011, p. 169]
  3. Barrett, Elinore (1963). The California Oyster Industry. Sacramento: California Department of Fish and Game.
  4. Booker, Matthew. "Morgan Oyster Holdings, 1909: Height of Bay Oyster Industry". Between the Tides Project, Spatial History Project. Stanford University. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  5. Booker, Matthew (February 2006). "Oyster Growers and Oyster Pirates in San Francisco Bay". Pacific Historical Review. 75 (1): 63–88. doi:10.1525/phr.2006.75.1.63.
  6. McCay, Bonnie (1998). Oyster Wars and the Public Trust: Property, Law and Ecology in New Jersey History. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. p. 246. ISBN 0816518041.
  7. Wennersten, John R. (1981). The Oyster Wars of Chesapeake Bay. Centreville, Maryland: Tidewater. ISBN 0-87033-263-5.
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