CALIFORNIA FISH AND GAME. 99 



HATCHERIES AND EGG-COLLECTING STATIONS, 1870-1921— Concluded. 



Name 



Location 



Years of 

 operation 



Bear Lake Fish Hatchery 



Gottville Egg Collecting Station 



North Creek Egg Collecting Station... 

 Burney Creek Egg Collecting Station. 

 Ward Canyon Egg Collecting Station- 

 Port Seward Hatchery 



Marlette-Carson Hatchery 



Almanor Fish Hatchery ' 



Yuba City Experimental Shad Hatchery ' 



Domingo Springs Hatchery ' 



Rae Lakes Egg Collecting Station ' 



Bryan's Rest Egg Collecting Station ' 



Mount Whitney Hatchery 1 



Tosemite Experimental Hatchery 



Cottonwood Lakes Egg Collecting Station_-| 



Clear Creek Hatchery 



Feather River Experimental Hatchery 



North Creek Hatchery 



Fall Creek Hatchery 



Kaweah Hatchery 



Metcalf Creek Egg Collecting Station 



Bull Creek Egg Collecting Station 



Grout Creek Egg Collecting Station 



Warner Creek Egg Collecting Station 



Eel River Egg Collecting Station 



New Tahoe Hatchery 



Feather River Hatchery 



San Joaquin Experimental Station 



Big Bear Lake, San Bernardino County.. 



Siskiyou County 



Big Bear Lake, San Bernardino County- 

 Near Burney, Shasta Co., on Pit River__. 



Copco, Siskiyou County 



Alderpoint, Humboldt County 



Carson City, Nevada (operated by Cali- 



iomia Fish and Game Commission) 



Almanor Dam, Plumas County 



Yuba City, Sutter County 



Chester, Plumas County 



Rae Lakes, Fresno County 



Bryan's Rest, Humboldt County 



Independence, Inyo County 



Yosemite, Mariposa County 



Cottonwood Lakes, Inyo County 



Westwood, Lassen County 



Grey Eagle Creek, Plumas County 



Big Bear Lake, San Bernardino County. 



Copco, Siskiyou County 



Hammond on Kaweah River, Tulare Co.. 

 Big Bear Lake, San Bernardino County. 



Dyerville, Humboldt County 



Big Bear Lake, San Bernardino County. 



Plumas County 



Branscomb, Mendocino County 



Tahoe City, Placer County 



Johnsville, Plumas County 



Auberry 



1914;- 



1914 



1915- 



1915 



1915 



1918- 



1916-1917 



1916-1919 



1916 



1916- 



1917- 



1917 



1917- 



1918-1920 



1918 



1918- 



1918 



1919- 



1919- 



1919- 



1919- 



1919 



1919^ 



1920 



1920- 



1920- 



1921- 



1921 



FISHCULTURAL DEPARTMENT PERSONNEL. 



By Harold C. Bryant. 



The fi.slicnltural work of the state gained its initial impetus from the 

 first commissioners, appointed in 1870, Messrs. B. B. Redding, S._R. 

 Throckmorton and J. O. Farwell. Because of their interest in stocking 

 the streams with desirable food fishes, the hatching and rearing of fish 

 received due encouragement. The first fishculturist retained by the 

 commission was Mr. J. G. Woodbury, who had been carrying on experi- 

 ments in fish breeding for the California Acclimatization Society, and 

 later for the United States Fish Commission. Mr. Woodbury devoted 

 nearly twenty years of his life to the interests of fishculture in Cali- 

 fornia. His principal work was done at Berkeley and San Leandro, 

 where trout and salmon were reared, and at Clear Lake station, where 

 the propagation of whitefish was attempted. Mr. Woodbury became 

 first assistant to Dr. Livingston Stone at the time the government 

 salmon-breeding station on the McCloud River was established in 1872. 

 He was made State Superintendent of Hatcheries in 1888, and during 

 the same year, with the assistance and advice of Dr. Livingston Stone 

 and United States Commissioner ^Marshal JMcDonald, he located the 

 Sisson Hatchery. The following year lie located the hatchery at Tahoe 

 City. 



