Ron Goede Fisheries Experiment Station slides
Content Description
This collection contains eleven binders of mostly color slides taken and collected by Utah state fish biologist Ron Goede from the 1960s to the 2000s. Goede traveled throughout the West visiting fish hatcheries and conducting trainings for game and fish and hatcheries personnel. Goede assisted in the treatment and attempted prevention of whirling disease which originated in Utah and which devastated trout in the West. Many of the slides show hatcheries which no longer exist. Also included are the CV and brief biographical sketches of Ron Goede, photographs of Fisheries Experiment Station staff, and a list of topics/places represented in the slides.
Dates
- 1965-2020
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access, except not available through interlibrary loan.
Conditions Governing Use
It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary copyright clearances.
Permission to publish material from the Ron Goede Fisheries Experiment Station slides must be obtained from the Photograph Curator and/or the Special Collections Section Head.
Biographical / Historical
Ron was born in 1934 in Columbus, Nebraska. His mother was from a German farming family, and his father, three uncles and grandfather were all German Lutheran ministers. The family spoke German and English at home. Ron's formative years instilled him with a love for language, wordplay, and nature; and his Lutheran upbringing endowed him with a moral philosophy and a deep respect for the rule of law. Ron must have been born to work with fisheries. At an early age he was raising aquarium fish and treating their diseases for himself and other people.
He graduated from high school in Lincoln, then earned a B.Sc. from the University of Nebraska, majoring in Zoology and Botany. During this time, he served in the Air Force for nine years as an aircraft mechanic. This experience taught him a respect for preventive maintenance, which became part of his professional credo.
In 1958, he was employed by the USFWS Office of River Basin Studies to conduct biological surveys on the Susitna River system in the territory of Alaska. Ron told of a time he became lost in a wilderness bog of cotton grass, which was nearly impossible to walk on. He resolved to focus on one small goal at a time and said this was the moment he chose to "take control of the trail!" In 1961, he earned a master's in Fisheries Biology from USU. His first job was at the Missouri Conservation Commission, where he eventually became the first hatchery biologist for the state, then Assistant Chief of Hatcheries. Eventually Ron built the first fish disease laboratory for Missouri.
In 1966, Ron was recruited by the State of Utah as a Fish Pathologist/Nutritionist and director of the Experimental Hatchery in Logan, a job he did for 34 years. He was always grateful to his mentors in Missouri, who instilled in him concepts that would guide him to emphasize the health of the fisheries in Utah and the unification of methods for disease control. Ron taught fish disease as an adjunct at Utah State University for 12 years. He developed and published a system to quickly assess fish and watershed health, which he called the Fish Health Condition Profile (HCP). He worked with the Colorado River Wildlife Council to usher in the drainage or watershed concept of disease control. Later, the Great Lakes Commission, Eastern Seaboard states, and the Columbia River states followed suit. Ron served on the committee for 22 years. He saw his mission as one of stewardship of Utah's natural resources. When whirling disease appeared, Ron had an important political role in codifying a Fish Health Policy Board within the Utah Department of Agriculture, balancing the interests of stewardship and commodity.
Ron was an active leader in the American Fisheries Society and received numerous awards from ofttimes disparate groups. He always said it was because of his family origins - intellectuals on his father's side and farmers on his mother's, coupled with his upbringing in an immigrant culture that allowed him to connect with different people.
From Ron Goede's obituary
Extent
2 Linear Feet (2 banker boxes)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Color slides taken by Ron Goede as part of his research and teaching of fish pathology.
Arrangement
The binders with slides in pocket sleeves were kept in their original order.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
These materials were donated to Special Collections and Archives in 2021 by Lisa Duskin-Goede.
- Title
- Guide to the Ron Goede Fisheries Experiment Station slides
- Author
- Finding aid created by Heather Housley and Dan Davis
- Date
- 2024
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives Repository
Merrill-Cazier Library
Utah State University
3000 Old Main Hill
Logan Utah 84322-3000 United States
435 797-8248
435 797-2880 (Fax)
scweb@usu.edu