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Otis Smith created workplace for all

February 25, 2025

During the time of segregation, Otis Smith ensured people of all races had a place to work at his Fish Products menhaden fish factory on Lewes Beach.

The factory once stood where the Port Lewes community is today next to the Cape May-Lewes Ferry. He moved to Lewes from Long Island in the late 1930s, following the fish. In 1974, with local menhaden stocks depleted by decades of aggressive fishing, Smith moved his Fish Products operation from Lewes to Louisiana. In the early 1980s, long after Smith had moved away, demolition began on the reinforced concrete buildings built to store fish meal. The dynamite made for a dramatic sight, but the job finally required a wrecking ball to take apart what Otis Smith had built to last.

Smith was much more than the owner of Fish Products; he was Lewes mayor for 18 years and a very generous philanthropist. He died in 2001 at the age of 91 in Selma, Ala.

  • Delaware Cape Region History in Photographs, published every Tuesday in the Cape Gazette, features historical photos from Delaware's Cape Region - particularly - and from throughout Sussex County and Delaware generally.

    Readers are invited to submit photos of historic interest. They can be mailed to the Cape Gazette at PO Box 213, Lewes, DE 19958, or via email to newsroom@capegazette.com.

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