Aug. 8 – On this day in 1920 K. Ross Toole, the father of
the modern Montana Historical Society, was born in Missoula. In 1951 after
graduating from UCLA Toole became director of the newly reorganized Montana
Historical Society and put it on the national history map with among other
things the acquisition of the Mackay collection of Charlie Russell artwork and
the construction of the current home of the Society and its museum across from
the Capitol. He wrote “Uncommon Land” and went on to become a professor at the
University of Montana and a preeminent leader in Montana history.
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