DockWorker67
Academy Prospect
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2026
- Messages
- 16
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Hull was one of the biggest fishing ports in the world. Thousands of men went out into the North Sea on trawlers and plenty of them never came back. The fishing industry built this city and when it collapsed in the 70s it devastated entire communities.
That heritage is everywhere if you know where to look. The street names around Hessle Road, the triple trawler memorial on St Andrew's Quay, the Arctic Corsair museum ship. But I feel like the younger generation doesn't really know or care about it.
The reason Hull has such incredible fish and chips is directly connected to this heritage. Places like Bob Carver's aren't just chippy shops, they're living links to a way of life that shaped this city. When you eat fish and chips in Hull you're eating history.
I might sound like an old man banging on about the past but I think it's important we don't forget where Hull came from. Especially now that the city is changing so fa
st.
That heritage is everywhere if you know where to look. The street names around Hessle Road, the triple trawler memorial on St Andrew's Quay, the Arctic Corsair museum ship. But I feel like the younger generation doesn't really know or care about it.
The reason Hull has such incredible fish and chips is directly connected to this heritage. Places like Bob Carver's aren't just chippy shops, they're living links to a way of life that shaped this city. When you eat fish and chips in Hull you're eating history.
I might sound like an old man banging on about the past but I think it's important we don't forget where Hull came from. Especially now that the city is changing so fa
st.