Portrait of fish activist Dick Goin to be screened in Port Angeles

Dick Goin

Dick Goin

PORT ANGELES — “The Memory of Fish,” a portrait of the late Dick Goin, will be screened at two locations at 7 p.m. Friday and will be introduced during Studium Generale at 12:30 p.m. Thursday.

The documentary of the life of Goin — a pulp mill worker and master fisherman who used his memories and persistence to battle for removal of the two dams on the Elwha River to allow salmon access to a wild river — will be shown at the Little Theater and Maier Performance Hall, both on Peninsula College’s Port Angeles campus at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd.

Admission will be $5 to the film, sponsored by the Magic of Cinema program.

On Thursday in the Little Theater, filmmaker Jennifer Galvin and Emma Jones, archival researcher and co-producer, will talk about the film that will be shown the next day. Admission is free.

“We are finally bringing this film home,” Jones said. “After playing in festivals all over this country and in England as well, ‘The Memory of Fish’ returns to the Olympic Peninsula for its premiere to local audiences.”

‘Green Oscars’

At the Wild Screen Festival in Bristol, U.K., the film was nominated for a Panda Award, which is also referred to as the “Green Oscars” for documentary films. The film premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival.

Coastal Watershed Institute biologists Caroline Walls and Jamie Michel will be on hand at the screenings of the film to answer questions about the evolving mouth of the Elwha, said Anne Shaffer, executive director of the institute.

“Jennifer’s film is lyrical and beautiful. It’s a welcome moment to just be quiet and breath deep,” Shaffer said.

Goin died at the age of 83 in April 2015, having seen the results of his labors in the demolition of two dams that blocked fish passage on the Elwha River, which now flows freely after the 2011-to-2013 removal of the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams.

Goin’s love story with the Elwha River began in 1937, as a 6-year-old boy running from Iowa with his family in the ’30s.

The Goin family settled on the Peninsula’s coast where they lived primarily on Elwha salmon.

He felt the salmon saved his family and so his life debt to fish grew, said organizers of the screenings.

In the 1950s, Goin began keeping detailed fishing journals, which scientists came to rely on for answers and institutional baseline data.

His notebooks became cherished sources of wisdom for how the river changed over time and how it could be fixed, said those who knew him.

The diaries, which are being preserved by Olympic National Park, represent a “rare chronicle of the Peninsula’s historical conditions and changes over several decades,” said Sam Brenkman, chief fisheries biologist for Olympic National Park, in March 2016 when the North Olympic Land Trust honored him posthumously with its Out Standing in the Field Award.

Goin worked as a machinist at the former Rayonier mill in Port Angeles for 42 years, retiring as a foreman.

He was president of the Olympic Outdoor Sportsmen’s Association, a member of the Western Pulp and Paper Workers, a technical adviser for a governor’s salmon program and was nominated for Washington’s Wild Salmon Hall of Fame.

Goin also was the keynote speaker at the first Elwha River Science Symposium in 2011, which “really kicked off and marked the beginning of the largest dam removal in American history,” Brenkman said last year.

“Dick Goin was an understated, lovely man that we all worked with regularly,” Shaffer said.

“He provided us with some of the only historical information we have on eulachon in the lower river of the Elwha. He is very sorely missed.”

For more information, contact Kate Reavey, who coordinates Studium Generale, at kreavey@pencol.edu.

More in Entertainment

Grand Olympics Chorus to host guest night

The Grand Olympic Chorus will host guest night from 6:15… Continue reading

Marine science, ecosystem to be discussed at Studium Generale

Clallam Marine Resources Committee members will speak at 12:35… Continue reading

Quimper’s Watch will present “Songs of the Sea” at Candlelight Concerts on Thursday in Port Townsend.
Quimper’s Watch to perform at Candlelight Concerts series

Quimper’s Watch will present “Songs of the Sea” during… Continue reading

Mary Delany’s life and art will be the topic of a Northwind Art School class on Friday. (Northwind Art)
New class added to Women in Art History series

Mary Delany lived a life of reinvention. At age… Continue reading

Film fundraiser to benefit Port Angeles High School orchestra

Zoe Omega and Sarah Tucker Zone will host “Charlie… Continue reading

Symphony, film screenings set for this weekend

Symphony performances, a garden discussion and film screenings highlight weekend events on… Continue reading

Tuba player Tyler Benedict is the featured soloist in concerts this week in Port Angeles and Sequim. (Diane Urbani de la Paz)
‘Music to warm the soul’ in Sequim and Port Angeles

Tuba soloist, orchestra to present first concerts of ’26

Panel discussion set to honor Dr. Martin Luther King’s legacy

Migizi Miigwan/Nicole Nesberg will facilitate a panel discussion during… Continue reading

“Jazz Club” will be among the hundreds of works in Northwind Art’s benefit pop-up sale this weekend at Jeanette Best Gallery, 701 Water St. in Port Townsend. (Northwind Art)
Northwind sale brings multitude of art, supplies to Port Townsend

Hundreds of bargains on artwork, books, materials and craft… Continue reading

Sorin to present first Yard and Garden series lecture

Marni Sorin will present “Growing Practices for a Resilient… Continue reading

Garden lecture, arts exhibits this weekend

A gardening lecture, photography and art exhibits highlight weekend events on the… Continue reading

Auditions to be conducted for ‘Cinderella’ production

Ghostlight Productions will conduct auditions for its production of… Continue reading