Note: The following column is also posted at Alaska's Historic Canneries (alaskancanneries.blogspot.com).
When
it came to Alaska fisheries, Anthony Dimond and W. C. Arnold didn’t see
eye-to-eye very often. As the territory’s congressional delegate from 1933 to
1945, Dimond advocated local fisheries management, a hiring preference for
Alaska residents, and the abolition of fish traps. As lawyer and lobbyist for
the Seattle-based packing industry, Arnold opposed all of those things.
On
at least one point, however, the two men were in full agreement.
In
July 1937 at least ten and possibly as many as thirty Japanese fishing vessels
entered Bristol Bay intent on catching salmon. They had neither license nor
permission from the U.S. Fisheries Bureau to be there, but the Japanese
government insisted the vessels were engaged only in a scientific research program.
Alaska fishermen observed and photographed the Japanese crews harvesting large
quantities of salmon, however. The outraged Alaskans estimated the catch of one
factory trawler alone at 20,000 fish, a number that could only be for
commercial, not scientific, purposes.
Both
Dimond and Arnold—not to mention every other American with an interest in the
Alaska fishing industry—supported political and diplomatic strategies that
would exclude the Japanese from domestic fisheries. Dimond proposed extending
the boundary of territorial waters as much as four hundred miles, a distance
that would enclose all offshore waters over the continental shelf.
The
1937 controversy, for essentially the first time, aligned the interests of
Alaskans and non-resident fish corporations. Just six packing companies
accounted for well over half the annual Bristol Bay salmon pack at that time, a
degree of corporate monopolization and attendant political power that
infuriated Alaskans in normal times. But since the Japanese “invasion” might
lead to a fishery collapse that would endanger the livelihoods of all
stakeholders equally, common cause was not hard to find.
Arnold
concurred with Dimond on the key points regarding the territorial boundary. The
canned salmon industry had opposed Dimond for years and contributed heavily
each election cycle to the campaigns of his Republican opponents. But now,
Arnold wrote a letter to Dimond stating the packers were “deeply appreciative
of your efforts.”
Political
historians have tended to view Alaska residents and the Outside cannery owners
as opponents with little to no common ground—or common waters, I should say.
The statehood movement in particular has been characterized in terms of this
conflict. Although such a focus is by no means misplaced, the 1937 Japanese
fishing crisis shows an overlap in the interests of the two stakeholder groups
was at times possible. As Alaska historians bring a renewed focus to the
history of canneries, we would do well to consider interpretations that
challenge previously accepted orthodoxy.
No comments:
Post a Comment