November 23, 2018 — Daniel “Danny” Cohen, the founder of Atlantic Capes Fisheries, one of North America’s largest scallop, clam, oyster and finfish harvesters and processors, and a major champion of wind farming and sustainable fishing practices, has passed away at the age of 63.
Cohen, who died in Cape May, New Jersey, heroically battled cancer for an extended period of time, an obituary published by Saving Seafood confirms.
The Fall River, Massachusetts-based company Cohen started in 1976 after graduating from Cornell University, in New York, with a degree in architecture, has grown into a fully integrated seafood company operating out of three states — Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Jersey — with more than 400 employees, 25 harvesting vessels, two unloading facilities, three processing plants and a fleet of delivery trucks, based on details contained on the company website.
Scallop industry executives, including those at competing companies, expressed their sadness on Wednesday.
“His passing marks the end of an era. He was a pioneer of the scallop industry, one of the men at the roundtable,” said Rob Rizzo, a commodities manager and longtime scallop industry professional at Eastern Fisheries, in New Bedford, Massachusetts.
“He was always professional, always a gentleman. He was a selfless champion of sustainable fishing and the scallop industry, standing up for everyone in the industry. And he treated everybody from the captains and crew of his vessels to the truck drivers and the workers in the processing plants as if they were equally important to his organization,” he said.
“It’s a very sad day. He will be greatly missed.”
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