Fishing
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
Artifacts and Realia, 1888 - 1970
This series comprises physical artifacts and shards collected during the course of Robert Nash's research on Chinese fishing industry in California, and are derived from the original sites of 1880s Chinese shrimp camps, which were located in the San Pablo Bay area near San Francisco
Bibliographies, undated
Contains reference lists and bibliographies which Robert Nash collected through the course of his research on a wide variety of topics, including: Chinese populations in the U.S. (mostly California, and in other states such as Hawai'i, Alaska, and Oregon), Chinese maritime/fishing activities, and the various fishing camps that existed surrounding these industries, in the 1870s and 1880s.
Chinese Fishing Vessels and Fisheries, undated
Contains field notes, statistical surveys, population indexes, diagrams, and more pertaining to the Chinese in California/U.S. and Chinese fishing/marine transportation vessels dating from about 1860 to 1960. Many are made on random pieces of notepaper, scratch paper, and stenographic/graphical notebooks with detailed drawings and measurements. Also includes some maps and topographical surveys that Nash collected during his research.
Mendocino County 1969, undated
Contains reference lists and bibliographies which Robert Nash collected through the course of his research on a wide variety of topics, including: Chinese populations in the U.S. (mostly California, and in other states such as Hawai'i, Alaska, and Oregon), Chinese maritime/fishing activities, and the various fishing camps that existed surrounding these industries, in the 1870s and 1880s.
Research Materials
Unpublished Writings, 1961 - 1975
Contains preliminary drafts, outlines, and essays written throughout the course of Robert Nash's doctoral studies, as well as a draft of Dr. Nash's dissertation, "The Chinese Shrimp Fisheries in California" (1973).
Writings, 1952 - 1975
This series comprises Robert A. Nash's writings on Chinese shrimp/abalone fisheries, fishing camps, and Chinese nautical vessels (sampans, junks, .etc) in California in the 1880s. There are about including his final doctoral dissertation, his publications in scholarly journals (e.g., Journal of the Nautical Research Guild, Chinese Historical Society of America, East West, etc.), and papers written in the course of his PhD studies.