Preparing for the herring – photos from the archives
George Gen and Sarah Mackintosh, members of our Visitor Experience team have pulled together a selection of photos from our online photo archive which provide an insight into Shetland's historic herring industry.
We see the scale of the gutting, packing and salting process, the different herring stations including Lerwick and Baltasound in Unst, the size of the herring fleet and some of the faces of the hardworking men and women. View more images from our online archive here.
In this photograph we see women gutting and packing herring in Unst and in the background are steam drifters, a relatively new type of fishing vessel that started to appear in the mid-1880s. These vessels had a considerable advantage over the sailing drifters as they were usually larger and not dependent on wind direction to get to the fishing grounds. These vessels sounded the death knell of the sailing drifters. Shetlanders did not own many steam drifters, instead opting to motorise their sailing vessels using petrol or paraffin engines as a method of propulsion. Note the herring barrels in the foreground with willow instead of iron hoops. Ref: Z00305
This photograph is of the main herring station in Baltasound, Unst. There was another herring station in Unst - Uyeasound - a much smaller operation. In this photo are hundreds of herring barrels as well as women gutting and packing the fish. They gutted the herring at a phenomenal rate of one a second and working in teams of three - two gutting and one salting and packing. They could complete three barrels an hour at an average of 750 fish per barrel. Quite an accomplishment. Ref: JJ00038
Herring station at Lerwick north harbour 1880s with hundreds of herring barrels in the foreground. The vessel in the background is the Fife registered drifter KY 1565, most probably from the fishing village of Anstruther in north east Fife. Many boats and indeed herring lassies came to Shetland for the summer season from that region. Ref: NE02684
A group of herring girls dressed in their finery ready to attend some social occasion probably on a Saturday night when they held many dances during the herring season. This was a welcome break before returning to the arduous task gutting and packing the herring. Ref: ST0004