444 AMERICAN FISHES. 
abundant, but many stragglers have been taken in the Housatonic and 
Hudson. Much effort has been put forth in trying to prove that the Salmon, 
of which Hendrick Hudson saw “ great store’’ in 1609, when sailing up 
the river which bears his name, were weak-fish, or some equally remote 
species. Surely weak-fish do not go up the river to the Highlands. Sal- 
mon have from time to time been seen in the Delaware, it is said, and, if 
this be true, it renders the story of Hudson still more credible. 
There can be no doubt that one hundred years ago the Salmon fishery 
was an important industry in Southern New England. Many Connecti- 
cut people remember hearing their grandfathers say that when they went 
to the river to buy shad, the fishermen used to stipulate that they should 
also buy a specified number of Salmon. There is a tradition of a farmer’s 
wife in New Hampshire who used to spear Salmon with a pitchfork to pro- 
vide food for the farm hands. At the beginning of this century they 
began rapidly to diminish. Mitchill stated, in 1814, that in former days 
the supply to the New York market usually came from Connecticut River, 
but of late years from the Kennebec, covered with ice. Rev. David 
Dudley Field, writing in 1819, stated that Salmon had scarcely been seen 
in the Connecticut for fifteen or twenty years. The circumstances of their 
extermination in the Connecticut are well known, and the same story, 
names and date changed, serves equally well for other rivers. 
In 1798 a corporation, known as the ‘‘ Upper Locks and Canals Com- 
pany,’’ built a dam, sixteen feet high, at Miller’s River, one hundred miles 
from the mouth of the Connecticut. For two or threé years fish were 
observed in great abundance below the dam, and for perhaps ten years 
they continued to appear, vainly striving to reach their spawning grounds ; 
but soon the work of extermination was complete. When, in 1872, a 
solitary Salmon made its appearance, the Saybrook fishermen could not 
give it a name. 
In 1878, at least five hundred large fish were caught in these waters, the 
direct result of the labors of the State commissioners of fisheries in 1874. 
This story of destruction, with a change of names and dates, may be 
repeated for the Merrimac and many other rivers. Mr. C. G. Atkins 
recorded, in 1872, twenty-eight Salmon rivers lying wholly or in part in 
the United States, in only eight of which Salmon were at that time regular 
visitors. The story of restoration will, it is hoped, soon be applicable to 
these, and perhaps to others to which the species is not native. Thack; 
