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This film is part of Free

Caller Herin

A striking documentary captures the waning fortunes of the herring industry as an old steam drifter braves a squally North Sea to bring in a fresh catch to North Shields.

Documentary 1962 25 mins

From the collection of:

Logo for North East Film Archive

Overview

Caller herrin was the traditional cry of fisher women touting the days fresh catch, a cry redolent of a prosperous herring fishing industry, back in the day. This vivid 1960s television documentary gives a real sense of the centuries old night-time pursuit of herring shoals in the over-fished seas off North Shields. The tough crew of an old steam drifter are watched over by a converted minesweeper from the Fishing Protection Squadron, policemen of the high seas.

In 1962 during the herring season off North Shields, a Tyne Tees Television production team spent around a week on patrol with the Royal Navy Fishing Protection crew of the HMS Sobiton, whose role was to protect British ships against foreign incursions into territorial waters and mediate between industrial trawlers and drifters, whose different fishing methods often caused conflict. From the 1950s to the 1970s they also played a key part in the various Cod Wars. By the mid-1960s fish stocks were being depleted at an alarming rate and North Shields no longer had its own fishing fleets. The steam-powered Welcome Boys was built in 1918 and was the last one remaining in a Lowestoft fleet of diesel drifters.