
Ralph W. Abele
Conservation Heritage Award
2004 Recipient
Rozell A. Stidd
Rozell A. Stidd, a conservation officer for the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and the Pennsylvania Game
Commission who later was appointed as a Pennsylvania
Fish and Boat Commissioner, has been named the
recipient of the 2004
Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award. The
honor is the highest recognition the Pennsylvania
Fish and Boat Commission can confer on persons who
distinguish themselves in the cause of conservation.
It will be presented to Commissioner Stidd January
24 at 1 p.m. as part of the Commission’s winter
quarterly meeting.
Stidd distinguished himself by outstanding
service in the cause of conservation and protection
and management of fisheries resources over a
lifetime of service. Stidd was sworn in as a
Commissioner of the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat
Commission on June 19, 2001. Nominated by former
Governor Ridge and confirmed by the Pennsylvania
Senate, Stidd served on the 10-member board of
Commissioners until his retirement in June 2003 for
health reasons.

During the Commission's April 2005 meeting, Commissioner Rozelle A. Stidd (center) received
the 2004 Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award, the Commission's highest recognition for
distinguished conservation accomplishment. Commission President Sam Concilla (left) presented
Stidd with a framed trout/salmon stamp print, and Commission Executive Director Dr. Doug Austen
presented Stidd with a flag that flew over the U.S. Capitol in Stidd's honor.
Born on May 14, 1921, at Guffey (a small oil-boom
village on the Kinzua Creek) in McKean County,
Commissioner Stidd became a fisherman at the age of
four years. He has been an avid trout fisherman for
his entire life. The oldest in a family of three
boys, Stidd graduated from high school in June 1939
at Mt. Jewett, McKean County.
In December 1939, he enlisted in the United
States Regular Army Air Corps. During World War II,
he served with the 8th Fighter Group in the Pacific
Theatre as a crew chief and engine change specialist
on fighter aircraft at dozens of different combat
air bases all over the Southwest Pacific, earning
five bronze campaign stars. In June 1946,
Commissioner Stidd enrolled as a student officer as
part of the 4th Game Protector class at the Ross
Leffler School. In June 1947, he completed the
12-month course required at that time, and was
commissioned as a District Game Protector.
In late 1951, he resigned his commission in order
to accept employment with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service as an Alaska Enforcement Agent, in the
interior of the territory of Alaska. From December
1951 until January 1954, he served a U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service district north of the Alaska Range,
with headquarters at McGrath, Alaska.
In January 1954, Commissioner Stidd returned to
service as a District Game Protector in northwestern
Potter County. In January 1962, he was promoted to
Law Enforcement Supervisor in the Southcentral
Division Office at Huntingdon. In June 1972, Stidd
was promoted to Supervisor of the Game Commission's
Hunting License Section (under the Division of
Administration) in Harrisburg. He retired from
Commonwealth employment with the Game Commission in
1978.
Even though Commissioner Stidd’s employment was
with the Game Commission, his lifelong love of
fishing, in general, and trout fishing in particular
made him a leader in conservation. He has long been
an active member of Trout Unlimited, and both
before, during and after his term as a Commissioner,
he was a leader in efforts to protect public fishing
opportunities by having the Little Juniata River
declared a public navigable waterway of the
Commonwealth. Commissioner Stidd’s account of the
trout populations of the Little J and his exploits
as a fly angler on this river helped emphasize the
importance of maintaining public fishing rights on
this waterway.
“The singularly distinctive accomplishments of
Rozell A. Stidd in a lifetime of service to the
cause of conservation reflect great credit upon him
and truly warrant his selection as the 2004 winner
of the Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award,”
said Commission Executive Director Douglas Austen.
Commissioner Stidd is the third former member of
the Fish and Boat Commission to earn the prestigious
Abele Award. He joins former Commissioners Leonard
Green and Enoch “Inky” Moore as a recipient of this
award.
Commissioner Stidd is married and resides in
Huntingdon, Pennsylvania. He has three adult
children.
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