Montana Yesterday

Road trip! The Mullan Road east from Missoula

admin | June 8, 2010

It’s safe to say that if you’re going to follow the footprint of the original Mullan Road this summer, you’ll probably have one of those moo-ving Montana experiences. You know, the kind that occurs when your backroad is blocked by languorous broods of red or black bovines.  Admit it: you’ve leaned out the window and [...]

One May week in 1910

admin | May 6, 2010

There may have been a week of more impact in Montana history than the one that began on Sunday, May 8, 1910. I’m not aware of it. President Taft signed Glacier National Park into being on May 12, and what stories that act has wrought. In Missoula, the electric streetcars, powered by the new hydroelectric [...]

‘Joe was here’ – A Missoula speakeasy

admin | April 5, 2010

Kris Crawford of Target Range sends along a photo of the old Kelley family house (as in Kelley Island) which she says was known as the “Pepperpot.” It was a speakeasy during prohibition. I’m trying to download the photo here, but I’m being told the file is too big, so I’ll have to get help. [...]

The sport of kings, mayors & high-powered attorneys

admin | March 23, 2010

Think horse racing was on the minds of Missoulians in 1891? Here are two separate blurbs, posted on the same day (Feb. 16, 1891) in the Missoula Gazette: “Cashier Keith of the First National Bank is the possessor of a new horse which promises to make its mark on the Missoula track next season. He [...]

The Florence Laundry, a tribute to Missoula’s blue collar

admin | March 17, 2010

It’ll be several weeks before demolition of the old Florence Laundry building on East Front and Pattee is Missoula is complete. Jim Howard of Frenchtown sends these thoughts: “I have many good memories of the old Florence Laundry as my granddad and, later, dad ran the business. “One very important historical point, though, that wasn’t [...]

More on Missoula’s George Briggs, who died in 1927

admin | March 10, 2010

A couple of posts ago we discussed what little we found out about George Briggs and Briggsville, a “suburb” of Missoula in the early 1890s just east of Fort Missoula, where by 1893 paper mills were apparently employing hundreds of women. Here’s George’s death story in the Missoulian, Dec. 16, 1927:

The long-gone kegger that refuses to die

admin | March 9, 2010

Keg on. The Aber Day Kegger documentary that premiered last October at the University of Montana will hit the airwaves next Monday night. It’s scheduled for 7 p.m. on KUFM-TV, as part of the station’s semi-annual pledge drive. It’ll repeat Sunday, March 21, at 2 p.m. The DVD will be among the featured premiums for [...]

A slice of life of Missoula 1893

admin | March 8, 2010

My previous post about Briggsville and George Briggs was based on the following article from the Missoulian, Feb. 15, 1893. It seems like this is a  pretty important piece of Missoula’s history, and there are still plenty of unsolved mysteries within. One is the reference to Prof. J. M. Hamilton, the president of “the university” [...]

Where in the world (or Missoula) was Briggsville?

admin | March 7, 2010

Our Sunday history almanac a couple of weeks ago in the Territory section of the Missoulian included an item about a brief strike by the motormen of the Missoula Electric Street Railway Co. in February 1893. It came from a Missoulian article that offered a fascinating and sometimes surprising slice of life in Missoula in [...]

On Missoula dairies and the Kelley Island family

admin | February 25, 2010

Kris Crawford, who works tirelessly to capture and share the history of the Target Range area in southwestern Missoula, writes about an event taking place at Dales Dairy tomorrow night. “We have a Target Range history study group working on various families and structures in our neighborhood area.  This Friday from 6-8:30p.m. in Dales Dairy, [...]