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Pictures and News Clips from Gill Poole (nee Eagle)
Mr Joe Eagle - Angling
and his grand daughter Gay Poole

Newsclip - Fishing News - August 18, 1911

Mr. J. Eagle, of Rushden, won the silver medal for the heaviest weight, 14½lbs, at the Rushden Angling Society's competition held on Thursday at Felmersham.

Joe with a pike he caught in 1908
Caught at Carlton 14th March 1908
Another prize catch - in 1929
At Burghley 8th August 1929
Another first prize in 1933
Joe Eagle won First Prize when he caught 36lbs of fish at Burghley on the 10th August 1933

A splendid catch of bream landed Joe Eagle in hot water with the Welland and Nene Fishery Board. Taking part in a competition organised by Rushden AC at Stamford's Burghley Park Lake, Joe hauled out 12 fine bream — and a couple of tench helped boost his grand total to 46½lb.

Joe brushed with officialdom when he took his winning bag away for a victory photograph — breaking the six-fish limit and incurring a fine of five shillings. But his pocket was spared when the owner of the fishery, the Marquis of Exeter, stepped in and paid up.

I should perhaps explain that all this excitement occurred on August 8, 1929, when Joe, who kept a tackle shop in Rushden's High Street, was a familiar figure in local contests.

The story was passed on to me by his daughter, now Mrs Bill Poole, who asked how her father's catch compares with the best efforts of current anglers. Well, that's a tricky question to answer definitively.

Another Rushden man, John Davies, took over l00lb of bream to win a match at Oundle two years ago, and has since topped the 60lb mark to score another victory. And Paul Chadwick, Rushden yet again, also weighed in 60lb-plus on the Ouse three years ago.

But Joe's effort a half a century ago is all the more remarkable when one considers how primitive his tackle was compared with today's sophisticated  equipment.

He would have used a heavy wooden greenheart pole and reel loaded with thick cotton or silk line, heavily greased and of very dubious breaking strain. With this gear, he would have been lucky if he could cast much more than 15 yards. If he could fish the same swim with the same conditions today, he would catch four times as many fish. Recent catches from the lake prove that there are still big Shoals of bream.

An indication of how exceptional Joe's catch was for its time is given by the extensive coverage it received in the Sunday Pictorial. Any angler landing five times that weight today would be lucky to rate a couple of paragraphs in the national press.

Joe's name lives on in the cup match still staged by Rushden, Higham and Irchester AC early each July — the nearest Sunday to Joe's birthday.

Gay Poole, daughter of Bedford Fly Fish Club chairman Bill, landed a superb 3½lb rainbow trout on only her fourth trip to Grafham.

Twelve-year-old Gay, the youngest member of the club, used a size 14 invicta as the successful pattern for the big fish. She is so keen on her new hobby that she ties many of her own flies, and uses these on trips with her father.

It was another female member of the Bedford club, Vera Lloyd, who showed the men the way in the pairs contest fished at Rutland Water. Vera landed the best eight fish limit bag with a haul weighing in at 15lb 3oz. Isham pair Pat and Stephen Green topped the 40 anglers in the event with an all rainbow catch weighing 261b 15oz.

The total catch by the anglers came to 184lb 3oz with R. P. Adams taking a 3lb 12oz brownie for the best individual fish of the day.

Result: 1. Pat and Stephen Green 26lb 15oz, 2. P. and R. Draper (Northampton) 23lb 2oz, 3 A. Dighton and D. Pettitt (Bedford) 21lb 7oz.

The most successful fly pattern was a Greenwell's Glory fished wet.

Bill Poole with his catch in 1973
Bill Poole in 1973

Obituary

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