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The Workboats of Smith Island

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"The people of Smith Island need their boats. They depend on their boats to make a living. They depend on their boats to go back and forth to Crisfield... Thats what keeps Smith Island going these boats these people have around here. Its the only way."Larry Marsh Smith Island Smith Island the largest Maryland island in Chesapeake Bay remains one of the most interesting communities on the Atlantic coast. Smith Islanders speak a sort of Tidewater English are devoted to the Methodist faith and maintain an intense relationship with the waters of the bay. For generations they have relied on fishing oystering and crabbing for their livelihood and have developed workboats that reflect the conditionsboth natural and culturalof local waters. In The Workboats of Smith Island Paula J. Johnson looks extensively at the remarkable variety of boatsdocumenting in fascinating detail their design construction and useand the watermen who depend on them. Johnson identifies the three vessel types most common on Smith Island today: crab-scraping boats deadrise workboats and skiffs. Every Smith Islander she notes owns at least one workboat and many have two or even three requiring each for a different purposeharvesting "peelers" (blue crabs in various stages of molting) oystering or crab potting and providing basic transportation. Johnson talks with Smith Islands watermen and boatbuilders as well as their families and neighbors about the history and future of the island and about the boats that dominate the islands cultural landscape. She includes dozens of photographs and drawings of Smith Islands distinctive watercraft. The result is a singular portrait of a community inextricably linked to the water. "Paula Johnson has made a meaningful and substantial contribution to the literature of Chesapeake Bay maritime culture. Focusing on the community of Smith Island and its dependence on the Bay Workboats of Smith Island will surely attract a variety of audiences from scholars to general readers with an interest in the Chesapeake region and its maritime heritage."Quentin T. Snediker Mystic Seaport Museum