Lake Fish Hatchery Historic District
The buildings exhibit a consistency of style and construction, with exposed gable trusses and oversized paired logs at the corners, all with brown paint.Many native populations were displaced by non-natives, but there was quality brown and rainbow trout fishing in the Firehole, Madison and Gibbon Rivers.An arched log truss is a prominent feature of the end elevation, together with a rubblestone chimney.[4][8] Building 729 was an office and summer residence for the Fish and Wildlife Service's hatchery director.[4] Other facilities built at about the same time included boathouses, a dock, and rearing ponds, which have not survived.