Commercial Fishing Pioneer And Poet David Krusa Dies At 75 - 27 East

Commercial Fishing Pioneer And Poet David Krusa Dies At 75

icon 5 Photos

author on Jan 10, 2017

Montauk resident David Krusa, a commercial fisherman and one of the pioneers of the local tilefish fishery, died this past week. He was 75.

Mr. Krusa and his longtime fishing partner, John Nolan, were the first captains in Montauk and among the first on the East Coast to exclusively target tilefish, a golden-skinned species that inhabits the ocean bottom near the edge of the continental shelf and now supports a multimillion-dollar industry.

After a battle with lymphoma in the 1990s forced him to give up his career on the water, Mr. Krusa turned to woodworking and writing poetry and short stories to exercise his boundless mental and physical energy. His works were featured frequently in the East Hampton Star and also in the anthology “On Montauk.”

Mr. Krusa was born on September 30, 1941, in St. Louis. When he was just 3 years old his father was killed in a plane crash and his mother moved the family back to her native Long Island.

Mr. Krusa grew up on the waters of Long Island Sound in a sailing family and by high school had set to harvesting fish and shellfish to earn money. He left for stints at college, first to study engineering at the Colorado School of Mines, then the University of Washington, then a writing program at Columbia University. But college couldn’t focus Mr. Krusa’s attention.

“The fishing industry always distracted him,” his wife, Stephanie Krusa, said. “He was always studying it, always thinking about what the state of the fishery was and how he could improve it.”

In his early 20s he wandered around the world’s fisheries. He fished for shrimp in French Guiana and for halibut in Alaska, returning to Northport to dig clams to replenish funds between sojourns.

During one of his home stints he met Stephanie King, the sister of fellow fisherman. He was 24 and she was 22 when they married in 1967.

After spending a few years on extended cross-country road trips—first to Mexico and then to Alaska, where Mr. Krusa discovered longline fishing—the young couple, by then expecting their first son, returned to Northport and Mr. Krusa set about starting a career as a commercial fisherman.

In 1971 he and Mr. Nolan, who also worked as a bayman in Northport, purchased their first boat together, and Mr. Krusa moved his young family to Montauk, where the boat was to be based.

For six years they fished for lobsters and made good livings, Mr. Nolan said, but were in search of something that could expand their business. After discovering the fledgling tilefish fishery while crewing on another boat, the pair converted their lobster boat for deploying and hauling tub gear for finfish on the same grounds where they had been dropping pots for lobsters.

The pair built and operated several longline boats over the years, growing a robust business that Mr. Nolan still runs. Only illness forced Mr. Krusa to withdraw from fishing.

“He had a deep love for the people he worked with—his favorite times were with those characters,” his son Lee Krusa said. “Fishermen are often people who don’t fit into other career environments. My father grew up without a father and had to find his own path and we wanted to encourage those who didn’t have a place in the world. He shared his knowledge and he led by example. He knew you couldn’t pass judgment without understanding where they’d come from.”

Mr. Krusa died of heart failure on January 4, his family said.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Krusa is survived by two sons, Kip, of Tennessee, and Lee, of California, a daughter, Margaret McKinnon, of Texas, and a brother, Christopher, of Illinois.

Services were held last weekend and Mr. Krusa’s ashes will be scattered at sea. In lieu of flowers the family has asked for memorial donations to the East End Foundation or the Montauk Fire Department Ambulance Company.

You May Also Like:

Westhampton’s Dylan Laube Drafted By Las Vegas Raiders

Former Westhampton Beach do-it-all running back Dylan Laube’s longtime dream has come true. It was ... 27 Apr 2024 by Desirée Keegan

Hans Von Schirach of Southampton Dies March 1

Hans Von Schirach of Southampton died on March 1 in Stony Brook. He was 84. A funeral Mass will be celebrated on Friday, June 28, at 10 a.m. at the Basilica Parish of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in Southampton. Arrangements by Brockett Funeral Home in Southampton. 26 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Service Planned for Barbara May Lee and Valerie Denise Lee of the Shinnecock Nation

A funeral service for Barbara May Lee, who died in December, and Valerie Denise Lee, who died in 2019, both of the Shinnecock Nation, will be held on Saturday, May 4, at 11 a.m. at the Brockett Funeral Home in Southampton. Interment to follow at the Shinnecock Cemetery. by Staff Writer

Maeve Burke Shugrue of Southampton Dies April 18

Maeve Burke Shugrue of Southampton died on April 18. She was 65. She was born ... 25 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Grace Hamor-Coady of Westhampton Beach Dies April 6

Grace Hamor-Coady died peacefully on April 6 at her home in Westhampton Beach, surrounded by family and friends. She was 92. She was born on March 30, 1932, in Hazelton, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Robert Christian Frick and Helen Ruth Vose. She attended Hazelton High School, then when the family moved to Lebanon, Pennsylvania, she attended school at Lebanon Valley Collage, where she received her degree in education. It was at Lebanon Valley Collage where she met her first husband, Ira Scott Hamor. She completed her education with a master’s degree in education from Long Island University. She was a ... by Staff Writer

Buses Discharging Passengers in Hampton Bays Sparks Social Media Outcry

Eyewitness reports that a bus arrived in the parking lot at Macy’s in Hampton Bays on Tuesday evening, April 23, from which a few dozen adults emerged, collected suitcases and other belongings and disappeared into waiting cars have sparked speculation on social media that they were migrants sent from New York City. But that assumption may be unfounded, according to Southampton Town officials. While officials had no definitive information on Thursday morning as to who the people were or where they came from, Southampton Town Supervisor Maria Moore told The Express News Group on Wednesday that according to Town Police ... by Christopher Walsh

East End Parkinson’s Boxers Are Rock Steady | 27Speaks Podcast

Rock Steady Boxing is a non-contact, boxing-inspired fitness program for people with Parkinson's disease to ... by 27Speaks

Southampton Town Board Hears Report on Tax Assessment Status

Though no action is imminent, the Southampton Town Board heard an update on a potential ... 24 Apr 2024 by Christopher Walsh

Southampton DWI Arrests for the Week of April 25

Michael Martin, 58, of Montclair, New Jersey, was arrested by Southampton Town Police on April 22 at 1:02 a.m. on Old Riverhead Road in Northampton and charged with DWI, a misdemeanor. Police said that an officer responding to a motor vehicle accident determined that Martin had failed to yield right of way, causing the accident. He had an odor of alcohol on his breath, bloodshot and glassy eyes, and was unsteady on his feet, according to police. He refused to provide a prescreen breath test sample and could not perform field sobriety tests, police said. He was transported to headquarters ... by Staff Writer

Positive Path Forward

State lawmakers and Governor Kathy Hochul delivered for residents of the South Fork and Stony Brook University in the state budget formulated last week. As part of the massive spending plan, the governor agreed to a measure that would allow the state and the Town of Southampton to partner in an effort to restore the historic windmill at Stony Brook’s Southampton campus. Additionally, Hochul’s plan to create up to 15,000 affordable housing units on state-owned land across the state — including at the Southampton campus — was included in the budget. Both measures mark a significant dedication by state and ... by Editorial Board