The tilapia monument erected by the Heirs of Jose C. Agahan by the Sampaloc Lake inaugurated last May 30, 2005 by City Mayor Vicente B. Amante, City Councilor Karen C. Agapay, and PCAMRD Executive Director Rafael D. Guerrero III as final activity in the commemoration of the month of May as Fisherfolk Month declared by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), and to commemorate the 50th year of the local tilapia industry the city. Mr. and Mrs. Jose C. Agahan introduces tilapia in San Pablo, the now famous “City of Seven Lakes,” by seeding Sampaloc Lake near the City Hall, and Palakpakin Lake at Barangay San Buenaventura, with tilapia fingerlings on summer month of Year 1955 at no cost to the local government unit. Tilapia is now the number one table fish in the world Dr. Kevin Fitzsimmons of the
What is now known as Doña Leonila (Mini-Forest) Park overlooking the Sampaloc Lake is actually a portion of the site for the City Hall Complex purchased in 1937 by the Municipal Government of San Pablo headed by President Inocencio Barleta, which was partly developed after the termination of World War II under the administration of appointed City Mayor, Dr. Fernando A. Bautista. During the incumbency of elected Mayor Lauro D. Dizon Sr., with the help of the Rotary Club of San Pablo, and under the supervision of Dr. Juan B. Hernandez, then club secretary of the local Rotary Club and Chairman of the City Beautification Committee, constructed some park structures at the park, with the fountain featuring the country lass with agriculture harvest as centerpiece. Probably, Hernandez and then City Engineer Perfecto Reyes were inspired by the figures affixed on the façade of the City Hall Building which symbolizes progress. Sometimes on April of 1961 when then President Carlos Garcia made a
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