April 30 – On this day in Montana history in 1803 the United
States purchased Louisiana from France. The boundaries were not clearly
defined, but included the western half of the Mississippi drainage basin from
the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains. It didn’t go as far as Louis and
Clark took it with their expedition, but it definitely included what became
Montana.
.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
Aril 27 – On this day in Montana History in 1805 the Lewis
and Clark Expedition entered what is now known as Montana just above the
confluence of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers. During the summers of 1805
and 1806 the Corps of Discovery made more than 280 campsites in Montana and
spent more time here exploring than any other area they trekked through.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
April 26 – On this day in Montana history in 1906 The
Anaconda Standard had an interesting story on a strange love triangle. Bart
Decker was in jail for larceny. It seems that Decker and another man were both
“wooing” Bessie Everett. When her purse came up missing, she thought she had
lost it and filed no complaint. However, Decker later bragged to his rival for
Bessie that “if he couldn’t get the girl, he at least got her money.” The local
officers soon picked him up.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
April 25 – On this day in Montana history in 1894 a group of
financially stricken and disgruntled Montanans that came to be known as Coxey’s
Army commandeered a train in Butte and headed for Washington, D.C. to take
their complaints directly to Congress and the president. Northern Pacific
Superintendent J.D. Finn said: “Where is the governor? Where is the United
States Marshall? Where is the Montana militia? How in the hell do you expect
one Irishman to stand off the whole of Coxey’s Army?” The train made it as far
as Forsyth where federal troops from Fort Keogh two days later re-took the
train. Rumors of heavily armed and “dangerous men” had the whole nation on
edge. But when searched, only three guns were found; one broken, one a .22, and
the other an 1860s rifle with no ammunition. On the other hand 43 copies of the
Bible were also confiscated.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
April 24 – On this day in Montana history in 1895 the
Yellowstone Journal in Miles City carried a story on a controversy involving
wolves. It seems that many people were upset because a new law required “the
full pelt from nose to tail” when collecting the state bounty on wolves. For
one thing they said wolves sometimes traveled a ways after taking poison before
dying, and often the only part that could be recovered later was the scalp.
They reasoned that the scalp should be proof enough. But Montana changed the
old scalp rule because some enterprising people were getting scalps from
furriers in Chicago and elsewhere -- who used the rest of the wolf pelt for
clothing -- and turning them in for bounty. “If all men were honest it would be
the fair thing to pay on scalps, but they are not,” the paper said.
Monday, April 23, 2012
April 23 – On this day in Montana history in 1921 a large
bronze tablet was placed at the site of the Montana Club in downtown Helena to
commemorate the place where the discovery claim was made that set off the gold
rush that created what became Montana’s Capital. The Montana Historical Society
and the Society of Montana Pioneers formed a committee that held several
conferences with “old timers” to determine where the original site was located.
Friday, April 20, 2012
April 20 – On this day in Montana History in 1887 the town
of Castle between the Little and Big Belt Mountains about 75 miles north of
Bozeman was named. Between 1886 and 1890 surrounding mines yielded about $1
million in silver. The town thrived with churches, schools and even home
delivery of milk. It was one of the richest in Montana. But about 10 years
later silver prices plummeted and as the local newspaper reported, “One day,
the local boarding house served 135 men. Three days later, it fed only three.”
Few people remember the once promising community today.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
April 19 – On this day in Montana History in 1959 notorious
problem prisoner Jerry Myles and two other convicts at the Montana Prison in
Deer Lodge seized rifles and took several guards hostage. In the ensuing
36-hour standoff Deputy Warden Ted Rothe was killed. In all 26 employees and
inmates were taken hostage. The riot ended when the Montana National Guard
fired shots from a bazooka into the cellblock. Myles committed suicide rather
than giving up.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
April 18 – On this day in Montana History in 1916 the famous
chief Rocky Boy of the nomadic band of Chippewa Indians in Montana died on the
reservation near Box Elder that was named for him about a year later. It was
said that his last words were that people remember what he did for homeless
Indians in Montana.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
April 17 – On this day in Montana history in 1867 John
Bozeman left the town that was named after him on a trip to Fort C.F. Smith on
the Big Horn River. He never returned.
First accounts said that he had been shot by Indians, and it created panic in
the territory. Later accounts doubted the truthfulness of the account and
suggested other reasons for him being shot including those who said “he was too
attractive to some men’s wives.” The facts behind his death remain a mystery of
Montana history.
Monday, April 16, 2012
April 16 – On this day in Montana history in 1941 “Mind Your
Manners,” a syndicated newspaper column, focused on how to behave at club
meetings. It was a question and answer format. One of the questions was: “When
a club invites you to become a member, how can you politely refuse?” The proper
answer: “By saying that you are sorry, but that you haven’t time for membership
in another club.” This writer was brought up in the Groucho Marx school of behavior.
My answer: “I would never become a member of a club that would have me.”
Friday, April 13, 2012
Thursday, April 12, 2012
April 12 – On this day in Montana History in 1941 the
Billings Gazette had an interesting “Mind Your Manners” column. This one was on
meal behavior as a guest, and advised not to ask if a food item is homemade,
that it is proper to place the serving silver into a dish when passing it, and
answered its own question of whether to stir gravy into potatoes before eating
them with “one can, but it is not the proper thing.” Simpler times.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
April 11 -- On this day in Montana History in 1911 Montanans
welcomed President Theodore Roosevelt to the state with a big parade on Higgins
Avenue in Missoula. The Missoulian headline read: “Record Crowd Awaits Coming
of Nation’s First Citizen – Arrangements All Complete and Strenuous, Happy Day
in Prospect.” After the parade, Roosevelt was off to the Florence Hotel “with
his escort of soldiers, Spanish War veterans, cowboys, Indians and citizens.”
In its morning edition the Missoulian was confident of great Big Sky weather:
“At a late hour the prospects are that the day will be bright and balmy and that
the largest crowd ever assembled in western Montana will be here to give Teddy
a rousing welcome.”
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Monday, April 9, 2012
April 9 – On this day in Montana history in 1866 Montana’s
first-ever Constitutional Convention opened in Helena. The land was still a
territory and the Helena gathering was organized by Acting Territorial Gov.
Thomas Francis Meagher. Politics were at a boiling point in the territory and
less than half the people chosen to write the constitution showed up. Essentially
what happened was they passed a measure without a quorum, it was never offered
for a state-wide vote, and therefore was never submitted to Congress. On top of
all that, the first Constitution was lost on its way to St. Louis to be printed
and no copy survives.
Friday, April 6, 2012
April 6 – On this day in Montana History in 1951 the big
news in Billings was the grand opening of the new Dairy Queen “A Brand New Product.”
The company was trying out some new marketing gimmicks and offered “curb
service” after 6 p.m. The slogan back then was “The cone with the curl on top.”
You could get “hamburgers to eat in your car” for 35 cents.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
April 5 – On this day in Montana History in 1872 what became
known as the first battle of Cypress Hills occurred. There now appears to be
little doubt that a group of wolvers working the area mistook some Assiniboines
for Piegans or Bloods who had stolen some of their horses and attacked them.
This was the first event in what eventually led to the tragic Cypress Hills
massacre which occurred in Canada in the spring of 1873.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
April 4 – On this day in Montana History in 1917 Jeannette
Rankin went to the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives for the first
time as the first woman elected to Congress in the nation. Ironically, it was
to hear the debate on the resolution for U.S. entry into World War One. She
eventually voted against entry into war and it led to her defeat in the next
election.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
April 3 – On this day in Montana history in 1885 in Miles
City, Montana Territory, the Eastern Montana Livestock Association founded in
1883 and the Montana Stockgrowers Association founded in 1884 merged their
operations under the name of the Montana Stockgrowers Association. The purpose
of the group was “to unite cattle and horse growers in Montana Territory;
first, for the enforcement of livestock laws; second, for the protection
against rustlers; third, to devise plans to protect the open range against
fires; fourth, for the uniformity in just claims against railroads and other
corporations; and fifth, to promote harmony in range work and roundups.”
Monday, April 2, 2012
April 2 – On this day in Montana history in 1906 rain was
falling across Montana. It was the start of what is called the “wet years” of
the Montana homestead boom. “Nature has left the door of fortune open in
Montana,” the state Department of Agriculture boasted. The population of
Montana nearly doubled in the next few years. By 1916 the abundant rain period
was over. In 1919 the state experienced its lowest rainfall ever and a large
section of the state produced no crop or pasturage while other areas had but
small returns. Nature’s whims resulted in thousands of people going broke and
leaving the state. Boom and bust once again reared its ugly head in the Big Sky
State.
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