Frank Woolner - IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame 2013

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
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    FRANK WOOLNER
    Frank Woolner was a well-known authority on fishing, hunting, natural history and conservation. To the ardent fraternity of saltwater anglers, however, he was the unequivocal master of surf fishing.
    Born in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, Frank left high school in his junior year, worked as a cook and automobile spray painter, and was New England's amateur bicycle racing champion (#13) for four years, retiring undefeated to join the World War II effort. From 1942 to 1944 Woolner was chief writer for the 3rd Armored "Spearhead" Division. He also was a tank commander on the front lines and a veteran of the Normandy Invasion on June 6, 1944. After the war Sgt. Woolner remained in Germany to co-write (with Major Murray H. Fowler) the Division's narrative history, the military classic Spearhead in the West.
    Frank hadn't done any surf fishing prior to 1942, but while overseas he received letters describing the budding activity on Cape Cod beaches. When he had his chance in 1946, both the sport and the tackle were still in their early stages of development: rods were blank Calcutta sticks with wound-on guides which didn't work for long, and the Cuttyhunk linen line soaked up water and showered anglers with every cast. But there were beach buggies, and Frank was immediately recognizable in his first of many Model A Fords, purchased for $25 and painted dazzle (grey, green, yellow, and purple) camouflage.
    When Frank became the Worcester Telegram & Gazette's Rod and Gun Editor, he used his daily column to introduce his home town to the sport -- and to the striped bass. His readers became striper-savvy and striper-obsessed in a big way, driving their 40-mph buggies 80 miles to the Cape Cod Canal, then another 60 to Provincetown, where they navigated the beaches from midnight to dawn and tide to tide. By the 1950s the sport was booming. The Worcester Striper Club was formed, and Frank helped organize the Massachusetts Beach Buggy Association in 1949. Their code of ethics covered everything from keeping beaches clean to maintaining good relations with town authorities, and in their numbered buggies (Frank in his lucky #13), members had almost unlimited beach access until the mid-1960s.
    In 1950 Hal Lyman, owner and publisher of Salt Water Sportsman, was called back into the Navy, and Frank took over the magazine's reins. Under his tutelage, what had begun in 1939 as the four-page weekly "Voice of the Coastal Sport Fisherman" became the instrument that defined marine angling and marine conservation, as Frank explored new frontiers and kept ahead of the rapidly evolving world of techniques, tackle, conservation and management. By the late 1960s the magazine's editorials and slogans ("Limit your catch, don't catch your limit") began to reflect the thinking of the day, and fewer photos of excessive catches were featured. Frank, who had appeared in similar shots years before, now had a favorite phrase to describe them: "Dead fish, dumb fisherman."
    As one of the biggest names in saltwater angling, Woolner's influence not only shaped Salt Water Sportsman but also fostered the careers of the sport's most promising writers. He held others to the same high standard to which he held himself, and went out of his way to reassure those in whom he saw potential, often sending a letter of encouragement instead of a stark rejection slip.
    Woolner was a masterful writer. He co-authored books on striped bass, weakfish, bottom fishing, saltwater tackle and techniques; authored six other titles; received numerous awards for excellence in craft; and remained on the Salt Water Sportsman masthead until his death in 1994. With his brother Jack he co-hosted the popular New England-area weekly TV show Woolner Brothers Outdoors, and the two were responsible for the development of "hunter orange" outdoor clothing after identifying the safety value of the fluorescent color. A seemingly gruff "man's man," whose formal education stopped in his teens, Frank could expound on almost any subject with intelligence, clarity and humor, and quote poetry to suit any occasion.
    Frank Woolner embodied the sport of surf fishing. He defined Salt Water Sportsman magazine, kept saltwater anglers informed about the developments in their sport during a period of amazing growth, educated readers on the importance of conservation, and encouraged countless writers. His contributions to recreational anglers and angling were pioneering, wide-ranging and profound, and the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame salutes him.

ความคิดเห็น • 1

  • @WHSTRIPER
    @WHSTRIPER 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for putting this video up.