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Fishwives baiting the lines, Newhaven
Unknown, 1890, Photograph, Reproduction
Fishwives baiting the lines, Newhaven
Fishwives baiting the lines, Newhaven
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About this image
Related
Location
Category
Library Item
Item no
37506
Title
Fishwives baiting the lines, Newhaven
Artist / maker
Unknown
Date
1890
Size
17.1 x 22.8 cm
Type
Photograph
;
Reproduction
Copyright
The copyright status of this item is unknown. If you have information related to the copyright holder please
contact us
.
Newhaven was founded by James IV in 1504 as a royal dockyard. It became an important fishing village, famous initially for oysters and later herring. An indoor fish market was built there in 1896. Newhaven fishwives, with their distinctive striped clothes, sold their goods around Edinburgh. David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson famously photographed these fishwives and other Newhaven residents in the 1840s. The area now has a population of roughly five thousand.
As well as carrying heavy loads of fish for sale, in baskets known as creels, the fishwives carried out other tasks necessary for fishing, including baiting and preparing lines and mending nets.
Exhibitions with this item
Leith Miscellany Vol V
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Agriculture and fisheries
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Fisherwomen
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Scotland
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Edinburgh
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