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Minnie McFarland Stevens
1911-1986
Inducted in 1990

“Minnie McFarland is a living legend.”
Phoenix Gazette
In her thirty years with the Arizona Game and Fish Department, Minnie
McFarland Stevens had many successful “firsts.” She was the
first woman creel census-taker, the first woman hatchery supervisor, and
the first person to develop a method for raising large numbers of Arizona
native trout. Always at home on Arizona’s lakes and streams, this
enthusiastic outdoorswoman enlarged the field of fisheries science and
enhanced the sport of Arizona anglers.
She was born Minner Catherine Mueller on December 10, 1911, in Floussant,
Missouri, near St. Louis. After her marriage to a Mr. McFarland, the couple
came west where McFarland worked as a chef in the finest hotels in Los
Angeles, Reno, and Las Vegas. In the late 1940s, the couple moved to the
Colorado River, downstream from Hoover Dam at Willow Beach. Possibly, her
husband worked in the hotel, but Minnie’s time there was spent on
the water, taking parties out on the McFarlands’ fishing boat. She
became a legend on the Colorado River, mastering every channel, whirlpool,
and slough from El Dorado Canyon to Lake Mead during her seven years as
a registered guide.
In 1954, her husband died, and Minnie decided to look for steadier work.
However, she still wanted to be involved with fishing and the outdoors.
She got her wish when the Arizona Game and Fish Department hired her as
a creel census taker. Her duties kept her along the Colorado River she
knew so well. She counted, measured, and inspected catches of fish, looking
for biologist taps and signs of disease. She also interviewed fishermen
to learn how they had done, what kind of boat or lure they used, and other
details. Then she passed this data along to the Phoenix headquarters of
the Game and Fish Department to improve fisheries management.
Minnie’s living arrangements were flexible. She kept a house trailer
at Temple Bar on Lake Mead and, while traveling, slept in her pickup, which
was outfitted for light housekeeping. Often she rode in her boat to find
fishermen, tying up at night in quiet coves. Later in life, she would consult
her diary to remember the largest fish she ever measured: an 18 lb., 8.6
oz. rainbow trout caught at Willow Beach.
After a few years, her superiors transferred her to the Graham Mountains,
the lakes along the Salt River, and Oak Creek north of Sedona. When working
the lakes, she spent much of her time in boats. While at Apache Lake, Minnie
referred to herself as the “Apache Rocket Pilot.” She loved
her job as creel census taker. As she once explained to author Don Dedera,
she was paid “to keep an eye on creation’s most entertaining
combination of critters – humans and fish.”
In 1959 the Game and Fish Department assigned Minnie to Sterling Springs
Fish Hatchery at the northern end of Oak Creek Canyon. She was the only
woman hatchery supervisor in the state. Her job was to help hatch and rear
rainbow, brown, and – most importantly – Arizona native trout.
The only true native game fish of the state, Arizona native trout easily
hybridized with other kinds of trout, and so had to be planted in isolated
streams totally inaccessible to other species. Since the 1940s, the various
hatcheries in the state had been unable to raise enough of them to stock
one stream. In 1964 Minnie made a breakthrough by successfully rearing
68 native trout.
The work was tedious and difficult. She succeeded in getting “the
tiny wiggling life-cells” to eat by preparing a special food of liver
put through a garlic press and then mixed with dried babyfood. The newly
hatched trout had to be fed every half hour at least eight hours a day
for the first two to three weeks “regardless of rain, snow, or blow.” To
feed them, Minnie used a feather to dist the surface of the water with
the food. By raising 68 the first year and 1,015 the next, Minnie made
it possible for the department to stock two trout streams – Grant
and Ash creeks in the Graham Mountains.
During the hatchery season between October and April, she tended trays
with millions of fish eggs and maintained the raceways where the growing
fish stayed. The hatchery was a key step in preserving the fish life in
the waterways of Arizona. Her success with Arizona native trout must have
been especially rewarding because she saved a species from possible extinction.
Minnie operated the Sterling Springs Fish Hatchery for twenty-seven years.
Three years before her retirement, the American Fisheries Society presented
her with the Distinguished Professional Service Award at the New Mexico/Arizona
chapter meeting. Her supervisor Steve Galligioli, chief of the Wildlife
Management Division, sent her a letter of congratulations for her “dedication,
hard work, and extremely capable management of the Sterling Springs Hatchery.”
In her personal life, Minnie stayed involved with the outdoors and with
animals. She and her second husband, Charles R. Stevens, whom she married
in 1966, lived in a house at the hatchery. They both loved the beauty of
Oak Creek Canyon. She once told a newspaper reporter that “it’s
like being in paradise.”
To further the cause of wildlife care and management, she became a founding
member of the Arizona Zoological Society. This organization established
public zoological gardens throughout the state to exhibit and study the
animals of the world. The society also sponsored educational programs,
biological research, and wild animal conservation. Minnie also belonged
to the Phoenix zoo.
Minnie retired in June of 1986 after working for the Arizona Game and
Fish Department for thirty-two years. In honor of her dedicated service,
she received a certificate of appreciation from the state. Her health was
probably failing at the time of her retirement; she died in Phoenix four
months later on October 10, 1986, from lung cancer.
From the early days when she guided fishermen on the Colorado River through
her innovative work at Sterling Springs Hatchery, fish and fishing remained
Minnie’s central interests. Her enjoyment of the sport led naturally
to her preservation achievements. Perhaps her greatest contribution was
solving the problems of raising Arizona native trout. This wonderful lady
became so dedicated to her work that in later years she rarely had a chance
to “wet a line” and enjoy the sport she had made better for
Arizona anglers.
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