Downeast Fisheries Trail
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Frenchman Bay Overlook

Park Loop Road, Bar Harbor

About half a mile south of the Hulls Cove Visitor Center entrance to Acadia National Park, stop at a pullout for an expansive view of Frenchman Bay, once a prolific cod-fishing region. The cod-fishery was subsidized by the federal government, which offered fishermen a bounty on the condition that fishing logs be turned in to local customs officials.  The Frenchman Bay district recorded more than 200 active cod fishing vessels that employed between 800 and 1,000 men in the 19th century. Cleaned, salted, and dried cod were sold to merchants, although some were traded locally and enough was saved to consume at home. Most of these vessels fished within 20 miles of shore, often within sight of land, and the waters around the islands of Frenchman Bay were choice fishing grounds. Cod hooks were baited with herring, menhaden, and clams. Vessels often stopped at Stave Island to buy fish caught in weir nets along its shores and to collect clams in mudflats at low tide. By the 21st century, the fishery was a highly regulated enterprise fishing for fewer and fewer cod. Without a viable commercial fishery, no one fishes for cod anymore in Frenchman Bay.

207.288.3338 | www.nps.gov/acad/index.htm

Seasonal (Park Loop Road Apr. 15-Nov. 30); Year-round (foot and bicycle access). Fee. Parking. Accessible.

Cod fishing ground
Herring Weir at Bar Harbor
Frenchman Bay
Stave island bar
Soutwest harbor 1891
Stacked dried cod
Drying cod

Fisheries Heritage

 

The volume of cod that was fished in Frenchman Bay and surrounding areas almost boggles the mind compared to today’s lack of a commercial fishery.  According to the researchers at the Gulf of Maine Cod Project, more cod were caught on hook and line within sight of Mount Desert Island in 1861 than may exist in the entire Gulf of Maine today.  Inside Frenchman Bay, Bald Rock, Calf Island, Egg Rock and Hadley Point were choice fishing grounds.  Cod continued to be a targeted fishery by local Frenchman Bay fishermen for the next 100 years.

 

But since the late 1980’s, cod has been severely depleted and no one fishes for cod in Frenchman Bay anymore, or anywhere in the eastern half of the state.  Efforts to bring the population back to commercially viable levels are fraught with concern over access to the fishery for local fishermen who have lost their permits due to inactivity. 

 

Another fishery that has seen dramatic change in Frenchman Bay is herring.  Many coves and islands harbored herring weirs (a system of nets erected near the shore that directed herring schools into a circular enclosure) and stop seines (a more mobile gear that could be erected across the opening of a cove when the herring were running).  No commercial herring fishery occurs inside Frenchman Bay anymore, as seiners and mid-water trawlers target their catch in offshore waters further out into the Gulf of Maine.

 

Though herring and cod fishing vessels no longer ply the waters of Frenchman Bay, fishing is still an important part of the local culture and economy.  The Bay’s commercial fishery is now dominated by lobster (in both catch size and volume).  Clam diggers, eel harvesters, and scallopers all generate a part of their income in this region.  And aquaculture has also become an important player.  Mussel farming, both bottom culture and suspended rafts, are located on leased sites in the northern reaches of the Bay (where they tend to be less prone to harmful algal blooms) and the state’s only cod farm has been in the works off of Sorrento since 2008.

 

Events & Activities

Acadia National Park Ranger Led Programs 

 

Sources & Links

Alexander, Karen E. et al. 2009.  Gulf of Maine cod in 1861: historical analysis of fishery logbooks, with ecosystem implications.   Fish and Fisheries. 10, 428-449.

Gulf of Maine Cod project 

Acadia National Park

Bar Harbor Historical Society 

Maine Folklife Center, Life of the Maine Lobsterman Interview Collection: Interviews with Edwin Lawson, 73, about lobstering on the Maine coast.

Trail Sites

  • Abbe Museum
  • Bad Little Falls Park
  • Bar Harbor Town Park
  • Bar Harbor Town Pier
  • Beals Heritage Center
  • Bucksport Waterfront
  • Cable Pool Park
  • Carryingplace Cove
  • Cobscook Bay Resource Center
  • Cobscook Bay State Park
  • Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery
  • Deer Isle – Stonington Historical Society
  • Downeast Institute
  • Frazer Point
  • Frenchman Bay Overlook
  • Frenchman Bay Scenic Turnout
  • Gleason Cove Park
  • Gordon’s Wharf
  • Great Harbor Maritime Museum
  • Green Lake National Fish Hatchery
  • Henry Cove
  • Islesford Historical Museum
  • Jonesport Historical Society
  • Long Cove
  • Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries (formerly Penobscot East Resource Center)
  • Maine Coast Sardine History Museum
  • McCurdy’s Smokehouse
  • Milbridge Historical Museum
  • Milbridge Town Marina
  • Morong Cove
  • Mount Desert Oceanarium
  • Naskeag Point
  • Otter Cove
  • Penobscot Marine Museum
  • Penobscot Narrows Bridge Observatory & Fort Knox
  • Peter Gray Hatchery
  • Pleasant River Hatchery
  • Prospect Harbor
  • Quoddy Head State Park
  • Roosevelt-Campobello International Park
  • Shackford Head State Park
  • Somesville Mill Pond
  • Taunton Bay Gateway
  • Tidal Falls
  • Waponahki Museum & Resource Center

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The Downeast Fisheries Trail consists of 45 locations from Penobscot Bay, Maine, to Passamaquoddy Bay, New Brunswick, that showcase active and historic fisheries heritage sites, such as fish hatcheries, aquaculture facilities, fishing harbors, clam flats, processing plants, historical societies, community centers, parks, and other related places. The Trail is an effort to raise awareness among residents and visitors of the importance of the region’s maritime heritage and the role of marine resources to the area’s economy. The Trail builds on these local resources to strengthen community life and the experience of visitors.

For a printed map-brochure of the Trail, please call 207.581.1435.

Download the web version of the map-brochure. (6.8 MB)

For more information about the Downeast Fisheries Trail, email or call 207.288.2944 x5834.

Downeast Fisheries Trail Brochure Map - Web Version

Downeast Fisheries Trail Brochure Map - Web Version

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