The Delaware River Story


Water Wars, Trout Tales, and a River Reborn

Price:
Sale price$61.99


Imprint: STACKPOLE BOOKS
By: By Lee Hartman
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
288

Description

Leo (Lee) Hartman lives along the Upper Delaware River in Equinunk, PA. He is a 45-year veteran on the Delaware system and former owner of Indian Springs Fly Fishing Camp in Lordville, New York. Lee continues to guide on the river and host anglers to great fly-fishing destinations throughout the world. Lee, a staunch conservationist, co-founded Friends of the Upper Delaware River (FUDR) and is currently co-chairman of the Delaware River Committee for the Pennsylvania Council of Trout Unlimited. Lee accepted a Community Service Award by the Upper Delaware Council in 2014 and also received U.S. Congressional recognition for outstanding and invaluable service to the community. He is the author of Trails in a Wild Frontier (self-published) about his fishing travels throughout Siberia and the Kola Peninsula from 1990 to 2013. Hartman was an agent for a Swedish company on the Kola Peninsula, routinely taking American clients for Atlantic salmon.

Reviews

Hartman offers the full sweep of the Delaware's story, and makes the case for its protection as a historically and ecologically important river that just happens to host a wild trout fishery that's unparalleled east of the Mississippi. -- David Kinney, Eastern Policy Director, Trout Unlimited This book chronicles the natural and unnatural history of the Delaware, one of America's most popular designated 'Wild and Scenic Rivers', that many believe is the best wild trout fishery east of the Mississippi. Hartman has been among the leaders in devoting his time and energy to any and all organizations working to protect and preserve the Delaware River and its fisheries. -- Ed Van Put, author of The Beaverkill From childhood fishing experiences in heavily polluted headwaters of the Pennsylvania anthracite coal region to eye-witness accounts of devastation, reparation and astonishing creation, Lee Hartman documents the history of and ongoing struggle to sustain what is commonly known as the Upper Delaware tailwater trout fishery. -- Robert Bachman A gripping story of the rescue of one of America's great rivers-from a choked and contaminated commercial waterway in the nineteenth century to today's thriving wild trout fishery. -- Garth Hallberg, author of Boon Juster and The Piketty Problem

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