Shirley Palmer gave the following speech
at the building dedication.
Albert (Ab) was born at the
home of his grandfather Allen’s Farm overlooking the Westport River. He said
from then on the river had run through his veins ever since.
As a
youngster he used his grandfather Palmer’s skiff to go quahogging and fishing.
At the age 8 or 9, he went lobstering, weekends, with his father on his boat.
He joined the Navy in WWII and served in Attu and
Guam where he ran a tug boat. On return, he continued to work the river. I
remember his comings to sell quahogs and my mother would buy 14 or 15; probably
charged no more than 25 cents. Over the years he told about a neighbor buying
three. He thought it was a mighty small chowder.
At first,
he was hired as a part time Shellfish Constable, working every weekend and
Wednesday during the week. He worked as a carpenter the other four days. Later
he was appointed as the first full-time Shellfish Constable. There were several
good years shellfishing. The banner years scalloping
he would say that many Westport families would have a real good Christmas.
These were long days patrolling the river, leaving home before dawn and coming
home after dark. No matter what the job was, he gave 100%.
He worked
with the Department of Marine Fisheries and gained knowledge from them. He had
great respect for Mike Hickey, Jack Fisk, and Arnie
Carr, to name those in my memory. He worked not to just enforce the law, but to
better the river and encourage people to appreciate all the river had to offer.
There were
many days and nights searching for missing people; most always in dense fog.
The town cruiser and our pick-up truck were vandalized in our yard while Albert
was at town meeting. Another time, the town boat was burned. Both incidents were
after he had made arrests. His own boat and motor was stolen after he retired.
He was
proud and grateful to the town to have this position for so long. After he
retired he was interviewed by the Providence Journal. They asked if he was
going to change his phone number. He said that wouldn’t be fair “it’s the
public that paid me when I was working and it’s the public that’s paying me
now.” The calls kept coming.
We would
like to thank the Town of Westport, the Board of Selectmen, and the Shellfish
Department. Our family especially wants to thank Gary Sherman for his idea in
naming the building in Ab’s honor. Thank you all for coming today. This tribute,
I feel, was for everything Albert stood for; honesty, dedication and caring. Ab would be pleased.
Shirley Palmer
September
22, 2007
Editor’s
note: Ab passed away in 2007.
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