Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More
Congdon Canal, Fish Screen, Naches River, Yakima, Yakima County, WA
Significance: The apparatus is the earliest known, and continuously operated, rotary-drum fish screen in the south-central Washington region. In 1926, active enforcement of a 1905 Washington State Fisheries Co... More