Few occupations are more at the mercy of the wind and weather than fishing. And it was the practical
requirement for warm yet unencumbering clothing that prompted the development of a fascinating
tradition in fishermen’s sweaters, variously known as jerseys, Guernseys and Ganseys.
It is likely that the word ‘jersey’, used to describe a knitted garment, owes its derivation to the name of
the largest of the Channel Islands, where worsted spinning was once a staple industry. Over a period of
time, the close-fitting garments knitted in worsted-spun yarn made in Jersey, and favoured by sailors
and fishermen, became known as jerseys.
Similarly, the neighbouring island of Guernsey gave its name to the classic square-shaped wool sweater,
which was designed with a straight neck so that it could be reversed. Gansey, a term which crops up in
the writings of both Samuel Beckett and James Joyce, is a dialect variation of Guernsey.
Until the coming of the machine age in the nineteenth century, most industries were small-scale and
craft-based. As early as 1589, however, the invention of the knitting frame by William Lee, a brilliant
Nottinghamshire clergyman, had put into motion the gradual migration of hosiery manufacturing from
the domestic setting to the factory. The uptake of machines was uneven, with pockets of the knitting
industry, such as the famous knitters of Dent who made small items on short needles, resisting change
for many years.
The production of heavier gauge knitwear remained a largely domestic activity until much more
recently, with women knitting for entire families well within living memory. Every village shop would
have boasted a section devoted to knitting yarn, and the market towns would have had at least one
thriving wool shop.
The isolated communities along the rugged British coastline were, by necessity, even more self-
sufficient than those further inland. In the poor fishing communities, families could ill afford the luxury
of goods imported from the outside world. Women knitted for their sweethearts, husbands and
children. At a time when resources were scarce, outgrown clothes were passed down and adults’
garments cut down and remade for children.
Visitors to the Yorkshire fishing ports such as Whitby and Filey and tiny villages such as Seahouses on the rugged Northumberland coast, reported seeing
women sitting in their doorways busy with their needles. Never wasting a moment that could be used to earn an extra penny, women worked late into the
evening by the light of rush lamps, knitting the navy-coloured yarn more by feel than by eye.
Although the classic Guernsey sweater remained plain (some Guernsey parishes did, however, have their own patterns), the stitch patterns used became more
complicated the further north the garment spread, with the most complex evolving in the Scottish fishing villages. These elaborate patterns came south with the
Scottish herring fleet, as the women folk followed their husbands down the coast to gut the fish.
Thus the pattern known as Whitby flag is in fact an interpretation of a Scottish design.
Young women, who had received little formal education, would develop the ability to memorize
complicated patterns, which were passed down from mother to daughter, gathering new variations
with each generation. The garments were made on five or more needles, often called “wires” or
“pins”, so as to be seamless. It was not unusual for men, too, to knit ganseys. Knitting was a natural
extension of the familiar tasks of making and mending fishing nets, routine jobs which required
considerable dexterity.
Tightly knitted in worsted yarn the fisherman’s Gansey was virtually windproof and waterproof. As
these working garments were rarely washed, there is no doubt that a layer of filth would have added
to the general protective effect. It is consoling to learn that fishermen had “Sunday best” Ganseys
which, being decidedly more fragrant, were worn for church and on high days and holidays.
Many venerable Ganseys appear in the sepia toned photographs taken by the well-known Whitby
photographer Frank Meadow Sutcliffe from 1880 to the turn of the nineteenth century. Prints made
from Sutcliffe’s original glass plates provide a fascinating insight into the clothing of ordinary working
people.
The characteristic, almost tubular, shape of the fisherman’s Gansey was dictated by practicality. The
welt, neck and cuffs were knitted tight so as to keep out winter blasts. According to hearsay, so tight
were the Ganseys knitted for the unfortunate children of one fisherman that, when the garments
were pulled over their heads, the children’s ear lobes bled.
The cuffs, also made to be close-fitting, generally ended short of the wrist to avoid impeding the
hands and becoming soaked with sea water as the men worked. The close fitting design also helped
to reduce the chances of the hem or cuffs becoming caught on pieces of equipment or tackle, a
mishap which could prove fatal
As time took its toll on the cuffs and elbows, the lower half of the sleeves could be unravelled and re-
knitted with new yarn. Garments made in various shades of blue, ranging from deep navy to a hue faded with age,
were a common sight.
for Ganseys & Kits : Guernseys : Breton Shirts
© Flamborough Marine Limited 2013 Design and content © Geoffrey Miller
Flamborough Head
Flamborough Marine
Your source for authentic
hand-knitted Ganseys, Gansey
Knitting Kits, plus a range of
quality, traditional knitwear
and Armor Lux pure cotton
Breton shirts
We pride ourselves on our personal
attention to detail. If you are at all
unsure about any aspect of our
products, telephone, fax, write or e-
mail us with your query which will
be answered promptly and, we
hope, knowledgeably. We wish to
ensure that you are completely
satisfied before making a purchase,
as well as after.
Sizing Information for
machine-knits
[Additional sizing information for
hand-knitted Ganseys can be found
here.]
Size exchanges can be a nuisance
but can, hopefully, be avoided if
you follow our sizing guidelines. If
possible, select a similar style of
knitwear or T-shirt which you
currently wear and feel comfortable
in, and measure across the chest,
from underarm to underarm, as
shown in the image above. Double
this measurement to arrive at the
actual garment size. Then compare
the measurement of your garment,
in inches, to the ones shown on
each product page.
Please do not confuse the
measurements we show on each
page with a person’s body
measurement; the measurements
listed are the actual dimensions of
our knitwear and Breton shirts.
A size 44 Guernsey sweater, for
example, will measure 44 inches all
round, but this does not fit a 44
inch chest, it will be suitable for
someone with a chest
measurement of 40 or 42 inches.
Please do take the time to measure
your own garments before you
order, to prevent size exchanges.
We keep our costs to a minimum,
to offer the best possible price, and
will have to pass on the cost of
return postage for exchanged
items.
Contact Information
Flamborough Marine Limited
The Manor House
Flamborough
Bridlington
East Riding of Yorkshire
YO15 1PD
United Kingdom
Telephone:
01262 850943
International:
+44 1262 850943
E-mail:
gm@flamboroughmarine.co.uk
A Unique Garment :
Old sepia photographs evoke the romance of far-off
times. Yet there was little romantic in the life of a North
Sea fisherman at the turn of the century when most
days involved a struggle against the elements. Life
could be just as hard for the womenfolk.
Days were long but, in addition to such essential tasks
as baiting the lines, time would be set aside for Gansey
knitting, either for members of the immediate family
or else for sale to raise a few extra shillings. Great
pride was taken in this knitting, especially for the
‘Sunday best’ Gansey (often not in the traditional navy)
to be worn at such occasions as the Flamborough
sword-dancing or Filey fishermen’s choir, both of which
still thrive today.
At some time past the custom arose that each fishing
community would have its own identifiable pattern
based on a selection of motifs related to the sea: nets,
ropes, ladders, herringbones, and so on. Although it is
now impossible to ascertain precisely when the
patterns came into being, this style of knitting
originated during the reign of Elizabeth I and the
patterns were fixed by the beginning of the nineteenth
century. This means that it is possible to tell where a
fisherman came from by the pattern on his Gansey; it
is also the factor which, more than anything, makes
the Gansey unique.
Eventually, however, the craft of Gansey
knitting went into steady decline as younger
people moved out of the fishing villages and
was in danger of dying out completely. Each
Gansey is a living part of history and we
believe it is essential that the craft is
maintained and nourished.
Every Gansey tells its own story. This was
originally for a very practical, if morbid,
reason. As each village fishing community
could be identified by the design on its
Gansey, if the body of a fisherman was found
it could then be returned to his home for
burial.
Note in the photograph at right that the high
collar, a feature of the Ganseys, has been
rolled down.
In larger fishing communities, small alterations to
the basic pattern could even allow for the
differentiation of families within that village. Indeed,
it is perhaps not too great an exaggeration to say
that Ganseys helped foster the community spirit.
Today that spirit is alive and well and Ganseys are
still being worn, not only by those who work in
them, but also by those who appreciate the
workmanship, history, and beauty of these
remarkable sweaters.
Note that the patterning is the same, back and
front. This means that the Gansey is reversible, so
that areas which come in for heavier wear, such as
the elbows, can be alternated.
The upper part of the body was knitted more densely than the lower part to provide extra warmth, and it was on
the yoke and upper arms that the knitters had the opportunity to show off their knitting skills and to elaborate on
the basic stocking stitch with numerous variations.
For detailed records of the many local interpretations of traditional fishermen’s jerseys, we are indebted to the
tireless efforts of Gladys Thompson, who, in the 1950s, pencil and paper in hand, scoured the fishing ports on the
east coast—from Sheringham and Cromer in Norfolk as far as Upper Largo in Fife.
Her quest, fired by a determination to preserve for future generations patterns which were seldom written down,
took her down the narrow harbour ginnels (passages) and into the cramped fishermen’s cottages, where often a
single room served as kitchen, bedroom and living room, with an attic above for storing and mending nets.
On one occasion Gladys Thompson describes how, on the track of two knitters who lived on Holy Island, she hired
a young lad to drive her across to the island from Berwick. He arrived in a car at least thirty years old and covered
with rust and sand. Their journey, made before the causeway linking the island to the mainland was built, entailed
driving through the sea which surged into the ancient car through the floor boards.
Many of the stitch motifs used to decorate the Ganseys were inspired by the everyday objects in the lives of fishing
families. Some of the best-known designs represent ropes, nets, anchors and herringbone. Other patterns are
based on the weather, echoing the shapes made by waves, hail or flashes of lighting. Some patterns had more
complex symbolic meanings. One of the traditional Filey patterns, for example, is a zigzag design called “marriage
lines” which represents the ups and downs of married life.
It was even possible for fishing families to recognize from the pattern of a Gansey, which fishing village, or even
which family, the wearer came from. At a time when the loss of a boat was a frequent occurrence, deliberate
mistakes or the wearer’s initials were often incorporated into the design in order to help to identify a body
recovered from the sea. As the Gansey was was traditionally worn tight-fitting and close to the skin, and with no
seams to come apart, it could not be washed off in the water.
By tradition, the sweaters worn by all kinds of seafarers, whether they be fishermen, naval or retired sea salts, are
navy blue—a colour reflecting the sea and sky. Before the advent of synthetic dyes in the late nineteenth century,
blue was obtained by using natural indigo, a plant extract imported from India. However, summer weight Ganseys,
knitted in a three- or four-ply yarn rather than the usual five-ply, were sometimes pale grey or fawn.
In a world which is becoming increasingly global in popular culture, the preservation of our traditional craft takes
on a fresh urgency.
Authentic hand-knitted Ganseys Gansey Knitting Kits
Traditional knitwear Armor Lux Breton shirts
Two vintage
Fraserburgh Ganseys
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Flamborough Marine Ltd
The Manor House
Flamborough
Bridlington
East Riding of Yorkshire
YO15 1PD
For authentic hand-knitted Ganseys, Gansey Knitting Kits,
Le Tricoteur Guernseys, a range of quality Armor Lux
traditional knitwear and pure cotton Breton shirts