The last gasp: Hull life during the fishing industry’s death

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Photography News

Art And Design,Culture,North Of England

In 1971, photographer Alec Gill began documenting the lives of Hull’s Hessle Road fishing community, as the city witnessed the downturn of its main trade

‘I couldn’t resist taking this picture’ … Alec Gill on his shot of a boy in a laundrette, taken 30 August 1978.Over 16 years, photographer Alec Gill witnessed the changing landscape of Hull’s Hessle Road and its community. The project began in 1971. Gill drew up a boundary map and stuck to it conscientiously

‘This is a photograph of freezer trawler the Dane H144 in the William Wright Dock. I must admit to being a bit scared whenever I went down into the deep and ginormous graving dock. I imagined that the leaking lock gates might suddenly burst open wide, and enormous volumes of water would surge. I did not fancy being bashed around in the dock alongside the 1,480-tonne massive Hull trawler’

Gill: ‘Sometimes, when I set off on my bike to photograph Hessle Road, I thought of a theme for that session – for example, the fish dock, pubs, corner shops or kids playing on the streets. More often than not, something would happen and I would get distracted by another theme, and that would take up the full afternoon. In this image, I was struck by the gaudy adverts outside this supermarket.

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