A History of Montana Volume 1 (2025)

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A History of Montana Volume 1 (1)[...]f Montana has been a work of mag-
nitude. Perhaps no state in the Union has had a more romantic or var[...]history of l\'fontana from the time of thC Sieur de
In V<!rendrye to the present. T he more mo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (2)[...]•
IV Pan.uTIVE MoNTA«A ,,No ITS ABORIGINAL INHABITANTS.........[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (3)[...]XVIII Tue OacAx1zATION 01-~ t\ioNTANA ,,No A H1sroRv oi-· ITs TERR1-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (4)[...]Armeonda el(.'(.1rlc sub-trnllon, 6:15
A(h•entura or[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (5)[...]Bolling springs nnd geys el'$, 051
Big Dry Country, 713[...]Brower, nc,·. r.el~h Richmond, 571. 573
Blncktoro. "\\"llllnm[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (6)[...], Cn.~ de, 740
n,nctrritld. ,JOhn. 2S2[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (7)[...]C.ttJlltn t to \"lr;:1nlA City, 412 Clc,·el:111d Pet1k lJountnln. 0SS
Chnrunnn. rtob-crt n .[...]Cohorn, J ohn. 500
Che"~•Her de It\ Vercndrye,, 103[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (8)[...]On«,·..101111 \\'.• 1024
De \Volrc. Stephen. voo. nor[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (9)[...]Falls or the )Ussourl, 22
t:ldr<d. 111,el $ .. 13.1S[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (10)[...]09, 116;; Hnuging ot Sin.de, 22i
Grcnt Fnlls smelter, -15i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (11)[...]Ilouse blll No. 2iS, 384
Henry, )HchflCl, 032 House blll No. 20. 392
ncnshnw. Job11 A.• J.10:, llouse bi1l ' No. 3l, 300
lfo1lner, fl. Sol. 10:$0[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (12)[...]2-&_. $7, 100, 6$.l
l.n $.'llle. Hobert C:well('r de. 7G 1.,cwliilOWO, i-W.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (13)[...]l01I fUltl Z,J ; g-rowtb durh11; U1e de<.-ade from 1000 t.o 1912.
OC(:UJ>:\tlOn, GS):;[...]Arts. ()00
:Snn.ing tn :\lont..1no, 432[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (14)[...]Qun11s, George w., 1561
Post or In :\(er de l'Ouest, l>t[...]re, 771 : R:1lnb0w F'":llls ()()W<'r de,·clop,ment, L-40
<-litnnte. 'ii'O ; m[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (15)[...]or J.ewls :rnd Clnrk, 230
ctre:1t o r Ch1er JO$el>h, 2il n outc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (16)[...]w.. 1581 Stewart, So.mu.el V., 816, 1603
Speer, wuuam o.. 1113[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (17)[...]Teton pass, 651, 652
Sun won hlpJ)el"l! outs,ltle the Sun tOdi:e (,·tew) , GOO[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (18)[...]Bllllugs llbrnry, BIiiings. l)Q,I; pllotoi;mpb de- \\'ns hburn. Gen. Henry D .. 059[...]Whtrncy. lrn TA, 1199
,,·:,lsb. :\llr h:\el J .. lU'i'S[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (19)[...]d when com- tion of 4,000 feet Utah has no square miles,
pared with other· states an[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (20)[...]passage of the united rivers, which almost de·
within a day's ride the traveler may behold[...], oniy eight inches above
reefs and rapids, left no record of their thrill- the lowest wate[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (21)[...]mbing 11p
three miles below S un river, where the de• the cliffs and around i he head of a de[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (22)[...]stonc is in every sense a noble
Codex S . This is no other than the first fiver. It carri[...]the Boulder
sures, showing how Lewis studied and no rivers. The first four of t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (23)[...]down snow drifts and melt the she.1th of ice.
No complete soil sun·cy of the state has C\'[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (24)[...]moisture-laden winds There is probably no state in the union
blow-off the Pacific oc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (25)[...]ditions.
nels, lakes were fonned, vegetation was de- In fonnations associated with the coal de-
stroyed, the animals that could travel were[...]an dwc!I in ~!on• prospected but as yet no commercial quanti-
t:ma.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (26)[...]difference that new mines were
springs have been de,·clopcd into popular re- fo und to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (27)[...]e to religion and the state." 1
Gaultier de Varennes, known to fame after- Tlie Duke was sufficiently impressed with
wards as the Sieur de La Vcrendrye, father of the idea to sanction[...]of the Rocky Mount;1,ins by Rt\'. £ . D.
!,fer de l'Ouest.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (28)[...]"by a device com~ the shores of La Mer de l'Ouest.'
mon in such cases, those w ho built and[...]were had been presented to the Conscil de i\·forine
great and difficult, conditions primit[...]of making this discO\'cry. lndee<l, the Pere de
and with extreme difficulty. T hree long years[...]of rdiably informing
gate the rumors of La lifer De l'Ouest, :rnd to the Cohncil as to the most[...]from the posts which they had already estab-
left no stone unturned. He set down accu- lish[...]ented to
The sum total of his report to the Comte de him at the close of his journey f[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (29)[...]ous a venture, a com- and became a "courcur de bois."
pany wts organized :md gi,1en a monopoly o[...]. In his
The little party, commanded by Boucher de wanderings as a fur trader he had "follo[...]he met Father de Gonor, who was just return•
Again, in 1731[...]ouraged La Veren-
same. The commander, Lcgardeur de Saint- dryc and offered to use his inf[...]been done in the matter of 01arles de Beauharnois, a chivalrous and
western exploration when P ierre Gaulthier de worthy gentleman, was at that time[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (30)[...]een sug-
L.1 VCrendryc was a poor man. He had no gested, not without prol,.1bility, that[...]of Sioux. \i\lithin a
others, headed by Dufrost de Ia Jcmerayc, few days fi,·e Ca[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (31)[...]rendryc
ful Sioux, the uTigers of the P lains," de.. and his men held a council with three I[...]to cease from war; that they
the brave Du frost de la Jcmcrayc, who guided would stay on thei[...]had made upon their land."
sister, llarie Reine de Varennes, and brother La Vcrendrye left[...]d River
a.da to confer with his patron, Olarles de Beau• of the North and the Assiniboine. At[...]<1uiet as our father (the Gov-
ment of Charles de Beauharnois were a never ernor of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (32)[...]f Indians and French
Charles, in honor of Charles de Beauhar- Canadians, numbering, in all, fifty~two,[...]known dangers beset the uncharted way. No
La Verendrye had been established there white[...]ew, had
but six days when he was joined by i\1gr. de ever crossed this trailless wilderness. On the
Ja[...]liacallister _College, believes that th is was
M. de Louviere to found a post. Turtle[...]rst Mandans
amongst them the Frenchmen would have no were seen. This must have been a hunting
d[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (33)[...]geurs known to have visited the 1\landans, and
de Corps of the gall:mt man•of-arms, which[...]se dernonstr:uions the )fandans rushed knew no law nor creed and whose unrecorded
forth to greet[...]s, especially aher the account given
me. There is no difference frorn the Assini- : Jou[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (34)[...]pearance or the interpreter this was no longer
~ For further account of 1hc :\l:[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (35)[...]t he had earned. to avoid the Ge11,s de Serpe11t, Snake or Sho•
The following Septemb[...]t La Reine. They La Verendrye lost no time after hearing
were enthusiastic in their acc[...]visiting Indians from the west had gone, no
hundred lodges strong, had plenty of horses[...]ses built of bricks and stones." no longer the rugged explorer of former days,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (36)[...]45

the consolation of seeing ~I. de Beauharnois the brothers determined to[...]e Powder river
off. In the spring of 1742, Pierre de La range."
Verendrye and his broth[...]two tion. The Beau.~ 1-lommcs were no less cor-
~landans to guide them to the camping[...]cndryes were glad
twenty days the Frenchmen saw no one, enough to be received with[...]e and the monoto- The Frenchmen had no interpreter but by
nous swell of foothills gree[...]s 1:tobliss,mcms pour ar.-.:cnir a lo Duoi,:,rrt, de with these people lasting 2r days the French-
la M tr de Y01ust, in Margry, vi. 585. Sc:c Parkman's[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (37)[...]dians,
r>lungcd in the extremity of confusion and de- who, unlike the others, was not self•inte[...]prisoners but that was all. The chief was
Gens de /'Arc or Bow Indians, possibly a eager[...]quote.s him as saying:
have traded in the west no t far from the "Come with us. \ Ve ar[...]ighty cavalcade poured its hosts
ing of the Cc11s de I';Jrc. across the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (38)[...]HISTORY OF ~iONTANA

could find no trace of them. They pressed the Chevali[...]ern city of)
ing the winter dwelling of the Gens de la Pierre."
Pelite Cerise, or Choke Cherry India[...]their followers, accompanied wanderings, the Genf de la Petite Cerise had
by a single guide, to see these people. After no knowledge of the route to the Western
ten days[...]journey of the Chcv:alicr de la Vcrcndryc :ind
drye an invitation from[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (39)[...]ordingly, close by .Monsieur the Marquis de la J onquiere, our
the camp of the Choke Cherry Indians, at node la Jonquirere, the map and
"On an eminence, nea[...]th the arms for the present. ll{onsieur the Comte de la
and inscription of the King .and some stones G[...]o you my unselfishness, my great am-
The Sieur de la Verendrye was over• bition, as well as that[...]least, a brighter prospect dauntless Sieur de la Verendrye died on De-
opened for the family. The Sieur de la cember 6, 1749.
Vercndrye was[...]rations, and the two young voy- quis de la GalissoniCrc, who was, as his pre-
ageu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (40)[...]if he had been helped more and if he
~·fa«1uis de la Jonquii:re, a hard, grasping and had not be[...]in this country is no halfway one, having for
The Sieur de la Vcrendrye had blazed the its priuciplc[...]Ii ts GATE o,· TH>: ~lou 1<T,\lxs.

of La ~!er de rOucs1:· which accomplished the result[...]ing than
'·i\[onscigncur: There remains for me no in story telling until such time as he c[...]them more fully. I-Tc ran in debt, he had no
feet of your Grace and trouble you with a[...]Sea, cess or recognition. /\1 the time when he de
in which he devoted more than fifteen o[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (41)[...]le he was he had made choice of i\f. de St. Pierre to go
elms hindered in h is progress[...]that there was more than· one post on the
ing no headway, which is what grieved him \[...]hat my brothers and I.would
most. M. le .l\-{qs. de la Galissoniere came to be charmed to be under orders from M. de
the country in the meantime, and in spite of[...]>0ssiblc in so distant a region, a number de la Jonquiere hurried, and, although he
of India[...]ing to a party I finally told me that M. de St. Pierre wished
. commanded gave example to our[...], allies wonld become of our interests. M. de St.
o f England, seem to be true services, indc[...]the only property in-
same hands. It is thns M. de ~lqs. la Calis- herited from my late fat[...]lready pur- ol trouble in spite of ~-1. de St. Pierre, and
diascd and gotten ready all the[...]upon the meanest voyageur; yet when l\f. de
ardor when death <.'arricd him from us the[...]sel.
honor to write at once to l\L le i •Iqs. de la If M. de St. Pierre had joined me at the time
Jon[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (42)[...]ishment is
therein good faith or humaneness. l\f. de St. that we find ourselves torn from a sph[...]eur, to judge
out shutting us entirely out. i\1. de St. Pierre the cause of three orphans. The evi[...]from which we have had the bit-
i\f. le i\fqs. de la Galissonii:re honors us. It terness, and oth[...]to be, with a profound
he maligned us to l\'f. de la Jonquicrc, who respect for your Grace,[...]d by it; my returns "CuR. DE LA \T£RE?\DRY£." 1s
this year amount to half,[...]d by father •·1 ha\'C charged ~I. de Saint-Pierre with
• and myself I find I am inde[...]er of mine who was tively, by Lamarque de i1artin and Jacques
murdered, some years since, by the Indians, Lagardeur de Saint-Pierre. Saint-Pierre
victim that[...]inated. Saint-Pierre, though un•
much if .i\1. de St. Pierre docs not entertain[...]some thirty-six years in posts in the
le l\'[qs. de la Jonquierc. Certainly we would[...]re-
not have been, nor will be, useless to l\1. de
St. Pierre. I hid nothing from him that I[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (43)[...]any of men b11ilt a
governor-of Canada. The Sieur de la Vcrcn- small fort "on the Saskatchewan, three[...]themselves - which they called Fort La Jonquiere.
no less devoted to the cause. The Chevalier[...]des and later, in
barrier of the Rocky mountains. No man of the winte r of 1752 they attacked him at
h[...]d to the merest handful and he was dis-
the Sieur de la Verendrye's death he had sent g11stcd with the[...]cific, humbly asked ernor of Canada. He appointed De la Corne
1>ermission to save that which might be left commander of the posts of La N!cr de l'Ouest
o f these goods. They were willing to ser[...]sited him. \Vashington bore a letter
of the Sieur de la Vcrendrye were ruined. to Saint-Pierre[...]oachments
qnicrc made but little progress, \Vhilc de of the French."
~fartin struggled up the i1issour[...]he year of 1757, he received
lieutenant, Bo11cher de Niverville, toward the the commission of l[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (44)[...]r Coquard "the old Canada, the posts of La i'iler de l'Ouest were
associate of La VCrendryc'' in a let[...]r, i'il. great object towards which they were but
de Saint-Pierre."[...],-the overlaml route to the
Although the Sieur de la Verendryc and \Vcstern Sca,-was for the time f[...]e The course pursued by the Chevalier de
sea of the vV est they had extended communi- la V[...]torians.
them. Speaking o f the "Post of La l\1er de The journal kept by the Chev~lier is 100
l'Oucst,[...]unt of graphical location.
these affairs given in De Bougainvillc's 1\1cm- It is interesting an[...]tle below where is now
"The Post of La ,:\ fer de l'Ouest includes Ft . Berthold. They then ascende[...]i as far as 1f1e Gates of the l\'1ounta ins.
oon, De La Reine, Dau1)hin. Pos Ko'ac, and where the ri,•er breaks through the Belt range
Des Prairies (De la Jonquiere), a ll of which (near Helena, ;\[ont[...]r Smith's river, and over
" The Post of La Mer de l'Ouest merits to the head of the ~lussels[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (45)[...]•No consideration of the general route of
ciet[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (46)[...]an advance of also believes that Les Ge1is de la Petite Cerise
12 days. This I think to hav[...]le that the Sho- \Vhether the Chevalier de la Ver~ndrye
shone camp was either on the eas[...]ack to camp where they left the we have no n1eans of knowing whether he
women and childr[...]Missouri,
bluff, near the fort, the Chevalier de la Veren- was found a memorandum, evide.ntly r[...]death oc-
governor of Canada. The Indians had no cured before he had the oppor[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (47)[...]the Jake of the same name. In
those regions erect no permanent momtment.s.1' June of the year f[...]ed the
Such an ancient pile of stones as tha_t de• Lake of the V.1oods and there erected Fort
scribed above was carefully examined on De- St. Charles. Fort Maure1>as, he founde[...]an Burd. Mr. Corson says that' the Fort de la Reine he built on the Assiniboinc
.:airn was "[...]f Deep In 1738, under his direction, M. de Louviere
creek." But although it was built in[...]ch of Canada. La Vcrendrye had, more-
The Sieur de la Verendrye and his sons over, suff[...]dangerous than open war," l\11. le ~rfarquis de
L~ Salle, Sieur de la Noue and Charlev.oix la Galissionii[...]ime and all but forgotten today. peg, no t on Cedar Lake. H.:llf Century 0£ ConOict,[...]n in Our Hi.story concerning p. 36. The Sicur de la Vcrcndr-yc in a letter quoted
\"erendry[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (48)[...]of their
halo of glory. Thus ii is with the Sieur de adventures forms another chapt[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (49)[...]s began a feud which split of the Prairies was in no sense hunting."
the nation into independent, anta[...]th, but inventive genius and skilled labor
1sirty no doubt had much to do in preventing c:i.me[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (50)[...]in town once or twice
denly drop in a hCap, from no apJ>.."tr<.'nt cause, during the winter for a s[...]e man with the gun and the duration no compensating income. The windup of
of daylight, f[...]to rot in pools of snow and water and
his train. No more were killed than could be those th[...]The
a cent to·equ ip themselves with, but found no winter of 188o-81 was the record breaker[...]d' to a team, wagon buffalo killing, owing, no doubt, to the very
and harness, gun and am[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (51)[...]anes o r ~fandans, he and his companions
there is no room to doubt the dependent fact. en[...]he Missouri.
t ions or the VCrendryes penetrated' no fa r~her They learned that t he s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (52)[...]iver in
l\[exico and that the name Absarokee is de- Canada to the southern headwaters of the l[...]t one of the tribes. He writes of the Sieur de la
band set out for the Rocky mountains, s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (53)[...]Blackfeet consisting of a the 01evalier de la Vcrendrye to the base of
hundred lodges each.[...]tead of cast•
Talkers. The Kakokoschena or Gens de la southeast into the country of the[...]band of Sioux or Dakotas-a people
The Chevalier de la Verendrye in his jour- thcr,1, as sinc[...]Iissouri in the part which
dians of which we have no knowledge today. La Vcrendrye would hav[...]ion of the great Shoshonean
hands of whom we have no ethnological trace. family." This nation with its many offshoots,
The Gens de l'Art, or Bow Indians, who wcl•[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (54)[...]owed handed down by the oldest Indians have no
such a debt of gratitude.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (55)[...]traveled "until the days
80th failed. In 1722, De Bourgn,ont, a rep- grew longer" and he Jc.[...]spirited narrath·e from the pen of
··Jfcmories de la Louisiana" which gave to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (56)[...]y. Three years passed. ~feantime Jeffer- de Semoulin, the Russian Arnbassador, and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (57)[...]r debouching into
:rnd another wounded, so he had no opportu• the sea.
nity at that t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (58)[...]Kentucky and resume operations a~
States with no Jess an object than to acquire a politician and a[...]problem that confronted Jefferson. It was no
would "strike simultaneously against[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (59)[...]d her entire possessions cast
Robert Cavelier de la Salle was a French- of that river. Fran[...]ength~ned
spirit. He started from Fort $ liami in De- by France's bestowal of Louisiana upon[...]or in his own party, while on a visit had had no thought of interfering with the
to a branc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (60)[...]der to prevent their capture by the
France, no longer bound to recognize the Unite[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (61)[...]cy,
Because of his indc1>endcncc and honor, the de~tiny of this country was controlled by
France p[...]John Adams. He would countenance no such
Tallyrand ardently urged the cla[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (62)[...]ment of the i.\olississippi valley, and no doubt
was, indeed, " the key to the Conti[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (63)[...]e to any
Domingo. It seemed that the French thus de- satisfactory arrangement, when sudden[...]ns. must remember at that tin1c there were no
In selling Louisiana to the U nited States he cables nor steamships, and therefore no means
would obviate the danger of losing this pr[...]nt of land asked for defeat. They had .no desire for that nebulous
was comparativ[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (64)[...]English languages, declaring ne,,erthelcs:t.
no other nation shall have a right to the sam[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (65)[...]the treaty of St. Ildefonso
"iolently opposed and no less a statesman than as we have scen,-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (66)[...]na to France, an order to Charles Dehault de Lassus, lieuten•
the Spanish go\'ermnent now r[...]oddard's adj utant.
O rleans which reached him on No~·cmber 23d. Lieut. Stcplicn \Vorrell, cros[...]f transfer. ernmcm house. From that mansion De Lassu:;
Jn order to 1nakc valid our claim[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (67)[...]horizon of her
- that west of which the Sieur de la Veren- views and marched steadil[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (68)[...]claimed title to the· vast and plan of the Sieur de la Verendrye. By these
-,·aguely defined "Oregon[...]gain the others arc admitted, agree on convenient de-
jealous English who sporadically thrust[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (69)[...]tion." one, were no less blue-blooded. One of Meri-
\Vhen[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (70)[...]cipline; intimate family no less distinguished than the Lewiscs ·[...]regain his strength. It is interesting to no'tc
qualifications, as if selected and i[...]r him. Although the t itle
I could have no hesitation in confiding the en-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (71)[...]ural geographers of uncommon
itary rank, uttered no word of protest or insight and ability. Th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (72)[...]t survivor of the. Lewis and Clark ex-
Perhaps no person of the party is deserving pedition.
of mor[...]iel Boone
parents. \Ve arc informed that the time de- and the Floyds were prominently identifie[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (73)[...]expedition." Gass and Floyd-no two agree, except after
This furthe[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (74)[...]uctions were penned, this one square sail, no less than twenty•two oars,
n ew posit[...]box
shall cmkaxor that they shall have no cause containing a small 1>0rtion of e[...]es, tomahawks, etc.,
will pass through no settlements of the Sioux and the s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (75)[...]HISTORY OF l\IONTANA

was no t to be interfered with by mere hum- th[...]mcfully detained." The time was by no means 'idle for officers
l'l'lcantime the[...]edge from voyageurs who
ciate, he could brook no further restraint. In had been as f[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (76)100
ol his friendly disposition; but they would nO:t warriors; they readily obeyed, and conducted[...]and our men ·,r~ttived the caresses, with no
cne~ny to strike, when all chance of escape is[...]woman to recall her words- a pc1Jalty by no "means light to those
companion, who had escaped[...]omposed, he in- sun was oppressi\•e and no water near, he
formed them by signs, of hi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (77)[...]st of the warriors in a party had tasted no food since tlie night be-
squadron brought up-the[...]made of
young men rode forward to their camp, and no · service-berries and choke-cher[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (78)[...]of the Shoshones
could be conveyed to them, and no trade would where he was to leave them "in order[...]four sons, and another Indian, began the de-•
nation, and declared their willinr,es[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (79)[...]of the Columbia, eleven miles
~(aybe they have no blankets!' " from Cape D[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (80)[...]f the
as latitude 50 degrees, alter which he will de- ~l issouri, making more than one hun[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (81)[...]* * The plain was intersected
much that we could no longer pursue them. by several[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (82)[...]level gone astray. In lesser things she was no less
plain; indeed, from the forks of the easter[...]of sea-otter. In an hour of sore
the distance js no more than 18 miles, with an distress, suffer[...]which she had
hills of inconsiderable height and no difficulty saved for her baby.
i11 pas~ing."[...]an terpreter, Charbonneau, with his wife and
had no thought that she was a heroine and child, to remain here, as he could be no longer
that her memory would live co-equal with[...]ders themselves, though ac• he had there no acquaintance and no chance
knowledging her usefulness, did no[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (83)[...]Rev. John Roberts.
served that Sacajawea received no material re- \¥ho Officiated at Her B[...]nd Clark
took particular care of Sacajawea in her de- took leave of the Mandans, embarke[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (84)[...]r the friendly protec.tio;, of
to ethnology. No detail was too slight for General \,Villiam Clark[...]r.espects the beou ideal of
of western tra,1el. western[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (85)[...],an into English and French. He was no longer young when he set out
The English e[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (86)[...]uffi- himself, with a portion of his command, de-
dcnt crew floated· down the Ye[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (87)[...]employcs as remained with him went t?1ough he had no use for mo re than a hali4
to Fort Ber[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (88)[...]rodden highways and the pers. \¥ c ha\'c no means of knowing how far
1irst to cstab1ish regul[...]r lVlissouri and their- posts were sought no glory,- nothing in fact but pelts.-
lit<: first p[...]lements in the wilder- and consequently left no record to posterity.[...]gani1.ations to mono()Olize the
out 1>ar1 in the de,·elopment of both Canada output of vari[...]y uthe Fur Country." The original trap• no other nation has ever handled the Indians[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (89)[...]mits of their oper,
Scotch merchants of Montreal. No licences ations caused the daring trip o[...]nnihilated in the greedy quest oi
lowed. This set no shining example of virtue furs. Acco[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (90)[...]the com-
ous waters, to gain the wealth of beaver de- pany was to establish commercial[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (91)[...]man
1.i,ually anxious to overtake Hunt, spared no c,·cr so completely dominated the fur-tr[...]l'>rla·' are familiar to all students and forrn no at not meeting any Indians, they decided[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (92)[...]Sublette on the 18th oi
which bound thent to no one point of oper.. J uly, 1826.
~ttions or[...]ges of many writers of one with visions oi wealth no Jess real than ii
the cl:\y. These vast enca[...].
his ends, he was willing to prostitute and de- The later history of this company,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (93)[...]erican Fur Company was a New
tain Fur Company had no parallel among the York concern and wa[...]sses amounted to 70 rncn, none of by no means clear for the new company C\·cn
whom died[...]ly dissuaded him,
the fact that most of them made no records of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (94)[...]ines, :i
old and tried member of the tribe said: "No document more re.markable for its ·r[...]l of their peaceful lllcKenzie lost no time in following this ad•
intentions and their[...]eet nation.
camp as friends, not foes. Burger was de- The fort was 'quickly bu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (95)[...]The post was isolated and in a wild nnd de.s igned to withstand anncd attack, and is <I<"•[...]e. To him, also, we owe a tremendon.,:.
traders. No white man would they permit innova[...]ad conceived the idc:'I
winter, '.M cKenzie lost no time in re-opening of stearnboat n[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (96)[...]ayed there six days in order to build a new No thought of actual compensation for values
post,[...]a verit- fore, whiskey they must have, law or no law,
able triumph in navigation. Not only did th[...]1.. 11s of alcohol, he at the time of Leclerc's de- per. Their capital was limited; so was th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (97)[...],with the
l\fcKcnzie had won. He would listen to no company's affairs. l\1cKenzic .w[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (98)[...]ed; and lesser 1839. llfitchell would stay no longer. He
011cs which we have not, but . privat[...]hither he re- worthy of Richard Coeur de Lio11 in his best
iSlired ivith David l\1[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (99)[...]ns placed in command of a company. Clarkc":t
made no move, they simply surrounded the promising career[...]s. He wa,
:\Iajor Culbertson, who would allow no act court~martialed, dismissed from the academy
o[...]ur story.
Han·ey. He headed the little force and deno less i1Jdefatigably pursued than the
rcc1ucst.[...]ion with one hundred horse;
lested the white men no more. :: ~Iiss Hele[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (100)[...]y"s J>istol was to be charged with
L·nion until No,·cmbcr, and w hen he re..'lche<l pow[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (101)[...]suf-
celerity that the would-be assassins had no fering the cravings of an almost constant[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (102)[...]and, as Harvey appeared, there must be no stealing of horses,-no killing
the,· fell upon him, ,seeking to adminis[...]t, while
~m;unary justice which his many crimes· de- the perpetrators remain away from it.[...]it with blood."
~fajor Culbertson had no use for Fort F. Presents were exchan[...]t was then considered the munifi•
,he stockade. No hunting was allowed and cent[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (103)[...]nced in 1855, was completed in 1856; th-.·
or no trade. He died in 1853 and the fort[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (104)[...]rop,
He was a genial and popular ,nan. Jie is de• crty since known as Fort Owen, he made many
s[...], in Oregon; with pack horses, usually
wfissouri. No other agent was appointed to going down in[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (105)[...]ablished posts of their own to the herds were no more.
.-i,agrin of the companies, who put every o[...]l Ashley and
tr<ats, of whose fate the ,vorld has no record, Andrew Henry; then Fort Union, Fort M[...]the more prominent traders whom we
cnactors, but no one was by to catch the fasci- have co[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (106)[...]ecause of other hand , winte r ro de Hown from the moun•
1h,· message he brought.[...]dren, ha<l
,·isiting ln<lia ns were ,·isitors no mo re and ~ealcd for t hemselves a bitter fate. These
d :-1imed no other land than this.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (107)[...]that had hushed the tribe, four
Winter that knows no Spring, in misery as braves came forw[...]coiled to strike. was the e1oquent chief,- "No•Horns•on-his-
The wretched sinner, in[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (108)[...]t heless maintained the most strict and de(Or•
courage and zeal and worthy o f the respons[...]e, C\'idcnth·
.·\t that early time it was no easy matter to w ith a \'icw of paying h[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (109)[...]with the ministers because they wore no black
\\lhile the l\lethodists, represented by[...]missionaries under the guidance of Jason and ried no crucifix. The syrnbolism of the
Danie.I Lee, were[...]were devising schemes and dis• · he would have no other faith, so he and his
,·u:;siog ways[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (110)[...]noes. They finished the journey Chief made Father de Smet welcome in these
in safety and obtained from[...]r would come renunciation was sincere, but Father de Smet
bearing with him the Cross, illuminated by[...]h to be their teacher and guide, Father P. J. De Smet was a Belgian. He
Father de Smet, whose memory is held in was born in Termond[...]to,·cd them. He remained among the ·
Father de Smet has described as one "who Selish long[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (111)[...]this, the zealous fathers did not appreciate.
De Smet, reinforced with two Italian priests, Th[...]n his The good fathers of St. ilfary's had no such
haste to make good his promise to meet the[...]rse of The i\Iission completed, Father de Smet
the Hell Gate river they took their w[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (112)[...]e war path and the a bishop, but Father De Smet chose to remain
intoxication of glory handed[...]themselves to lead. This trip of Father De Smet to Europe has
Therefore, one of the new prie[...]rara, Italy, where he was born
priests and Father de Smet needed more help- ,May 16, 1812, an[...]e of tools; finally, in a studio, he prac-
Faiher de Smet to seek reinforcement abroad,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (113)[...]and visited.

• the appeal of. the sick, no matter who they In spite of the progre[...]oad agents" respected him of St. 111ary's. No power could restrain the
and suffered him t[...]et warriors who invaded the very bound><ies
no record of the mothers and babes spared[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (114)[...]e revengeful be<ause kingdom in itself, and no white man had trod•
of the coolness of t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (115)[...]the ideal which inspires a deed ami
declare that no survey was ever made during the de[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (116)[...]ansition, If of the whites, but an Indian mission no more.
the placid image of O ur Lady, look[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (117)[...]ey had.
ited braves of the north country had no rea- Our men then saddled their hors[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (118)[...]e happy anticipation of soon present-
Father De Smet was a man of unfailing ing us t[...]two Blackfeet had
am! catechism," writes Fathe-r De Smet. reached their camp, and info[...]hirty Nez Perces Two days later Father De Smet wrote:
with their chief and the Blackfoot c[...]hat you are
Fi"e years after, in 1846, Father De Smet pleased.' \Ve learn by an express,[...]e great Tail•
~ Ldters and Sketches by P. J. De Smet. Letter • Oregon Missions by P. J. De Smet. Letter
XU. pp. 317, 318. "Early \Vc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (119)[...]RY OF l\lONTANA

Bearer, a kind of orator, or aid-de-camp to you know them; the savage[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (120)[...]ferent savage nations, hitherto so Father De Smet at the fort, was furnished
iuimic.·al to on[...]. From this time arosc."8
fa ther De Smet bent his· energies towards the I[...]'1oorc:
hi, ( Maj. Culbertson's ) absence. Father De " '1 knew the person to whom you re[...]ll. pp: 246, 247.
: Oregon ~lissions b>· P. J. De Smet, Letter XXIV. ~ Prcsbytcrinn Ch[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (121)[...]ing over of cultivated land near the mission were de
the country with a friendly band"of the tribe,[...]sides characterized these forays.
Brother Francis De Kock were sent to the · Some depredation[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (122)[...]s grew up; one, the Holy Family Mis-
ers Francis De Kock and L. D'Agostino. In sion, the other the Mi[...]of the recreant Black- h3d been visited by Father De Smet and
feet became the dream of the yo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (123)[...]Some of those who have lived with the
Father De Smet ,·isitcd them and first s1>0kc Cheyennes·[...]n Old \Voll, one of the leading chiefs, who
de\'ices until 1882. At that time Father P. · had b[...]welcome to Bishop Brondcl on one
several months. No permanent mission could of his visits to the miss[...]re sue• children, we went out hunting and cared no;
ccssful and in response 10 his appeal Re,·. whe[...]line nuns journeyed we went out to meet our foes, no matter where
westward from Toledo, Ohio, a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (124)[...]a contract school, being in charge of the De Smet. He says of them :
~i;1crs of the U rsuline[...]year, board- l'rom the day o f Father De Smet to 188o,
•:r.-.. boys and g irls. The pupi[...]wing t he.s c people turous young C hc\'alicr de la VC.:rendryc first
ircun their barbarism. "fhc[...]r a school was commenced in the
n:' the Chevalier de la VCrend1'ye. were in the spring[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (125)[...]the land. ever.
This was no doubt an 'offshoot of that won• Although[...]nine schools, including the. kindergarten, with
no one. They made no other attack, though an aggregate number of some[...]the Fathers and the Ursuline nuns passed Father De Smet, their founder. Through hi;[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (126)[...]e years spent in recording we can find no answer to their riddle. How
1,is travels and his[...]\Vcstcrn Travels, 1748-1846, edited by R. G.
lad;no, S. J. Thw3ite.s .)
Ortgon Missions, by P. ]. De Smet. (E.uly \ Vest• Affairs at Fort[...]ty Contributions,
L<ucrs and Skctch,s by P. J. De Smet. (Early Vol, Ill.
Wcucrn T[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (127)[...]ed land and was "impressed thought of it no more. Further develop-
with the remarkable[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (128)[...]with an axe and now fast falling to decay,
found no mines that would pay. The fact of may still Ix, s[...]e Anderson and James and Granville fect tools and no lumber until they could get
~luart searche[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (129)[...]he same time
01>inion, by the way, they have seen no rea- in Boise Basin, and which, for th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (130)[...]s Silverthorn, himself, apparently laid no claim
on Gold creek, l'l'1ont.1na gold had found[...]of Fort verthorn always carried, and as he had no
Benton. who came to the Territory in the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (131)[...]ered there, and among them $Orne of
::c:arch bOre no fruit of which we have knowl• th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (132)[...]minent men. They had no alternative but to com1>ly,
The first[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (133)[...]at vicinity when boys comipg to camp and no tools with them.
1
Sec Granvil[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (134)[...]ever went more contentedly to bed than have no cares. Crossed at the mouth of the
we.[...]g of the hundred strong * * * We see it is no
discovery when we get to Bannack and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (135)[...]camp sprang up, some to live and prosper,
will go no further.' Some talk and it was oc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (136)[...]e of the ~'\'firmesota party moved to if no more promising country were dis-
Bannack.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (137)[...]the latter, and on. account of its elevation it
no one knows and whose presence is unac-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (138)[...]win Lakes. He came to iny below the knee, through no apparent cause-
camp nearly starved to death. I fed him and no gopher holes, rocks or anything to cause it
his party some good substantial grub, which a.nd how it was done no one of us could find•
they had not seen for si"[...]dust and set it on the table and said mackinaws, no steamboat being there. \\'~
'X, help yourself to[...]persing the rest, who never molested the
would be no killing done on either side. I place again. .
tol[...]ulch were tlioroughly prospected, and in all
off. No whistling and no money taken. Next of them paying gold mines were discover~d-
night camped at the Dearborn. Had no trou- The approximate yield of the placer[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (139)[...]aken from her numerous in early days, no place on earth has bee.n more
piaccr mines.[...]ton, Nagle and others. This gulch has
Deer Lodge (no.w Silver Bow county) . This yielde[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (140)[...]record
T he discovery of fabulously rich gold de- replaced it with Virginia. \Ve arc inform[...]Peak" or Califor- emphatic than polite, that no such blot should
nia, turned aside weary of the l[...]new Jn precisely what way the name of· a town
El Dorado of the north. Indeed, the opening o[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (141)[...]tters in their own hands.
communities there was no middle class. They In the spring of 1[...]to cross. One large
sister, and the prostitute. No~ infrequently flour train arrived at the[...]g . incident intense and the oxen could find no grass and
witnessed by Sidney Edgerton,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (142)[...]o it. 'fhe
dt111andcd for 100 pounds. There was no party !eh, but returned next day when };!rs.
fi[...]e streets were thronged day and night to see that no flour was hauled
hy :i,~xious men, and deep mutt[...]ls moved
Qnade was nominated for, secretary, but de• quietly and steadily along, saying they desired
d ined. A flour sack nailed to a pole was their no trouble, but must have Aour. The Aour was
banner[...]d others addressed the crowd, advising great that no time was taken for accurate
an orderly sea[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (143)[...]mes dressed in uniform, but, more g4,,•. u-
nO disturbance whatever, and nothing taken[...]n1ale associntion, dcscr\'CS a more peculiar no- and its black edging, sets off her dainty fi[...]e. This is the 'Hurdy-Gurdy' house. :\s No
A History of Montana Volume 1 (144)[...]n hi s
"All varieties of costume, physique and de- lectures. Somet imes ma)' be seen g[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (145)[...]the announcement of that fact would be maclc
no apparent division, in reality it was separted[...]be recorded, that I would do so, ,nd
There was no government in l\'lontana at recip[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (146)[...]o at
sih-cr mines, and stated his conviction that no their request, and I went for my bla[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (147)[...]e seconds, but the sensations which I ex•
had no time to prepare for travelers. He ·re-[...]ing cards, and this table being in reach of Gal-
no horse there to trade; that the horses be-[...]by my side, shoot. I replied that I had no desire to shoot,
,·ailed Yeager to the side o f[...]assurance to Gallagher that he had
that there was no horse in the corral which bee[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (148)[...]stay if he did, notwithstanding this reque.st and no
the remainder of the night; and, ha[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (149)[...]t conspicuous fig ures among will give you no more time to J)repo;rc for death
lhc Vigilant% wa[...]here and hearing of the riches 0 £ the "No br:wcr offictrs C\'Cr lived than U. S . Marsh3l
n[...]openly sustained this movement, no one can juslly
"\Ve herewith gi\'c vou n[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (150)[...]rder Dillingham, who was deputy sheriff
there was no one holding him. :\ few day:; und[...]a philosopher.
o f hone.n ,·, a stranger to feM, no t powerful, but He is oiten called t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (151)[...]store. \Ve had to stake chains and through, stood no-hang. \Ve kicked, because the
p:i.ddoeks to secure them, having no handcuffs. <!csperadoes turned loose and <lid as.[...]er take go uphill ' a11d those in favor of no-hanging
ih~ir medicine and take chains instead[...]nd declared ( with
~.-rowd ho\'ering around and no one could tell six shooter in his hands) the pris[...]ound ·a big crowd of •1 noticed that they have no tears and
, x\'.'ited people and put the two co[...]C. Forbes, who was acquitted, the grave there was no one to offer up a prayer,
l:t out and didn't wa[...]xt ,
lo take the hang-men, an5i one to take the no• morning I noticed that two cub bear heads had[...]on and Lyons.
men and dedare themselves hang or no-hang, At that time the gang of murderers a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (152)[...]f the victim, we found
ounces of gold for a pair, no matter how long a knife which Tom[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (153)[...]lower road by Lorraine's ranch. It de\'eloped afterwards that the reason Ives'
~Ir. Ho[...]death on the scaf-
tt> leave the road. There was no alternative fold will form our n[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (154)[...]watchfulness, experiencing narrow
that there was no disappointment, although escapes or bloo[...]rfulness to the dcni1.ens
declaring them to be of no value. This was of these wilds an[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (155)[...]to those enter- ably be carried from the country. No horse-
prises and industries which insured[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (156)[...]challenged the party to a race, and c.ame ne;ir
no wagon road from Virginia to S ummit, al•[...]e hill, as far up· as Highland, I have no desire to inventory Ives' crimes.
there was a tim[...]they could be ascertained. Of There was no definite proof, however, of l\'es'
this pa[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (157)[...]urney to
the prisoners without regard to the mere de- Nevada, and advised me that[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (158)[...]ough. lutely remorseless. This was essential in de
He stated to me, howc,·er, that there[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (159)[...]number and I obj«tcd to was true, J had no desire to make their a~-
adding the list oi i\lr.[...]ld not do to treat a remark of that kind
and that no reason could be given, if we did with indi[...]of that crowd which permitted no misnndt r-
The deliberat ions or the forenoon[...]care or knowledge of l"es· think he got no more than he dcsen·ed and
guilt o r innoc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (160)[...]ther places of resort to give their , ·ote upon
no occasion to regret his identification with t[...]without
the prosecution. _If the lawyers for the de- merit and were overruled.
icnsc a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (161)[...]bery and murder thickened around him
There was no lull in the excitement, while and the names of hi[...]killing
of the prophet or liar who invented them. De- Tbolt. As the names of these active _part[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (162)[...]to make of him an
with a tightening grip which no alarming talc example 10 all persons in like manner offend-
of 1>ossible discomliture could in the least de- ing.
gree relax, and on the morning of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (163)[...]e liule hamlet. The fire was blazing
There was no bad temper in the crowd, ex- brightly, and[...]erous an~ a little wild, and do them any good. No one at the present time
110 one could tell what w[...]pon dull cars. A cusations which had been ma.de a,gainst the
hundred or two men who would[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (164)[...]A

l had been considering what course should be no doubt as to the result, and Ives' friends[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (165)[...]nd if 1 wanted
throug h the crowd and while I had no thought to use them, and J thoug[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (166)[...]was a falling back of the crowd, but no dis-
lt has been generally stated that Ives p[...]for the first time putting discomfited, were by no means content to sur~
down with pen the C[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (167)[...]or the leading counsel for Hillerman. H illerman de-
conspirators to seize the re\'enuc c utter C hap[...]cial enterprises on the Pacific ocean, which had no method of tra\'CI and did not know
had been frust[...]and remain in the country till he should
obode of no inconsiderable luxury. In the choose to de[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (168)[...]abalistic
tana into a bloody reign of terror, was no hap- sign which proclaimed them subjects for pl[...]ecame monstrous and
their lynx-eyed surveillance. No miner ever thc.s c hunters of human prey killed for the
made a rich strike but they knew of it; no sheer lust of the thing.
quantity o[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (169)[...]time the victim was Lloyd iMagruder.
cendency and no life or property would be on[...]join the party and when the
that we will re,·cal no secrets, violate no laws opportunity presented i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (170)[...]uspicion grew tl\at there had been another No person seated there could reali1.e fully that
tra[...]ion of the Vigi- who had wi,·es breathed no word to them of
1,.rues had occurred at an opport[...]conm1unity. a deCJ> fall of snow. No fires could be kindled
The real charac[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (171)[...]mpcd with got the robl~rs. I told him, no, not yet, and
Mr. George Breckenridge that night.[...]going to appropriate them. '\Vhy,' he said.
- no house-Christmas Eve. As cold a night[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (172)[...]the morning Buck asked me when 1
1old them I h ad no time and had 10 attend 10 was going, Told h[...]always
him, 'it would·take a thousand · to let de<:ent perk-ctly cool and collected and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (173)[...]earlessness elicited the exclama• fly. No time was to be lost. A place \\'as
tion:[...]d was as follows: tent of which she did no t know. He had re-
Sam Bunton. roadster[...]pcnse was terrible. A moment 1no rc and she
with his c.xccutioncr:1-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (174)[...]were fruitless, he
perate of the Road .J.\ gcnts, no tc<l io r his asked for a "good drop" and die[...]ose master-grip his confederates were the no horse. so, carrying his saddle on his back[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (175)[...]escape, crack shots of the territory. No word was
,·xcept in the s ingle ir!stancc of Nei[...]even after the desperado was a
I lowic, betraying no suspicion nor uneasiness, prisoner a11J <li sarmcd, no one cared to act as
J.!allopc<l on, nC\'Cr he[...]m to 13annack. Howie
the big pack train. He found no one there was a small man, wiry of[...]h John. The man bm J)hyskally he was no match for Dutch
was too terrible a character and,[...]t" Ol>1aini11g no :;aid llowic started off alone
At the salutat[...]e were some fifty-odd men.
;ti'oot and he carried no weapon in his hand. :\t Jirs1 no one there would consent to accont-
Xc,·er[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (176)[...]and de.alt out s wih and merciless death, tmti!
A de[...]he citizens established a P coplt's
There were no r<'gularly organized Vigi-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (177)[...]ose eyes man of the committee kept his place with de-
of his •nd asked how l knew. I told him[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (178)[...]mine and I cut him down and we packed hitn
have no influence but wo uld gladly do so -if to the Virginia Ci1y Ho1el and took the ropes
I had.' The two hundred miners[...]said: aherwards married ,lrs. Sl~de. The Slade
· .\ lcn, do your duty,' and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (179)[...]ions were established between spired with no feeling of brotherly IO\'C. H
the white trader an[...]black as they bo undaries o f that whidt is node-
used here; at that time it applied to any[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (180)[...]tone to the mouth of Twenty-five Yard creek; felt no scruples in killing Indians. The fol-
then[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (181)[...]opposite the camp, and leveling their
being given no quarter or mercy. And what piece[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (182)[...]m. The two men, being armed
fill a large .volume. No man of the frontier with sporting Spencer[...]At the mouth of the 1\lusselshcll river ing no resistance, the f>alls came whistling
in t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (183)[...]ed presented a dreadful o n the red de\'ils when they came into camp.
sight. C. D. \Vatk[...]ian whites. The go,·crnmcnt had taken no
shot twice-one ball entered at the lowc.st[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (184)[...]was
several battles i'n which the Indians were de- established January 30, 1865. The headqua[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (185)[...]crying the outrage ccnain that he would brook no such wrong
of lynchings in the benighted Sout[...]o back a bit to the dr.imatit:
The Indian had no court oi a1>pcal. For him story ol ~iaj. '.[...]'.II CI..\Rl(f.

justice was nil. There was no redress fo r such a direct bearing[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (186)[...]in council, smoked with him and said: be, no one could foresee.
"~1 y friend, you are contin[...]old woman. The
lOC'atcd; but the authorities made no effort to
restore them to him. ~liss Helen[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (187)[...]all was nine o'clock-an unusual hour for visitors
no longer be responsible for the depredations[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (188)[...]Rising from his seat, he started for the door,
no more of it. But when the young fellow[...]showing an oul\i•ard 1>ity, he
was so helpless, no firearm near, no friend, referred to my sister, who had died a few
no means whatever of escape. \l\1hat could[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (189)[...]bloody scene, including the wounded Horace
seemed no lig ht • * • but the cold light of b[...]that darkened chamber
with you that shot you! Oh, no, it was not the wounded 1nan noiseless[...]feet and raised his hatchet rearly to defend
'No, Nellie, it was that one.' he replied.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (190)[...]be but not in a condition to decide. No subordinate
little doubt that the soldiers knew f[...]Chief.
with smallpox or stupefied with alcohol to de- Shortly after the massacre of Heavy R[...]aid him low. He
111ountain Chief was camped at no great died like a dog, alon[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (191)[...]oint
road in the course of its building and the de- of view to that of primitive people, still we[...]ucceeded
"barbarous patriotism" which made them de- . by Gen. Alfred H. Terry. B_rig.-Gen. E.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (192)[...]ce as far as the .Missouri river was proe no,i· the troops having reached the field of the
v[...]ties w~s molested by Indians. only were no especial precautions taken by
In the y[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (193)[...]lined to treat the 1873 and 1874, there was no open hostility
whole alarm as a groundless fright[...]ecretary
command and upon his own res ponsibility de- of \Var and the Secretary of the Interior,[...]ence of attacking the settlements.
lows ~,ad made no move to betray their pres- Genera[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (194)[...]or
consider the latest injustice to the Indians. No with strangers and i.n their councils.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (195)[...]attan, were killed. General
10 which they had no right on the western Harney in- command of three regiments de-
side of the river.[...]This
first treaty with the United States. The no• was in September, 1855. It was doubtf[...]ving up land which they
which the Indians had no comprehension. Un- wished to ret[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (196)[...]of the Sioux. Red Cloud, the tril)al leader, de-
where they, as interlopers, were opposed by the[...]f Carrington's com-
road. This was, in a sense, a de<:laration of mand having been sent out with a[...]rence "swept ttirough western Kansas like a de-
was held at Fort Sully and the treaty signed[...]ly rep- A. Forsyth and Col. George A. Custer, de-
resented. The chiefs were stubborn and un[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (197)[...]ri, of the government had been to force the no more of the Indians than they did of the
Indians[...]returned
this divided jurisdiction. The Interior De- as evidence of the goods delivere[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (198)[...]ap, was
At the time that Custer went to battle no found to be parcelling out Indian age.ncie[...]president's esteem, spoke
ment of Custer's attack no infom1ation was freely of having seen in[...]this
with great deliberation ; a man evidently of de- opportunity to publicly humiliate and punish[...]s campaign he had
planned well. This uprising was no sudden "Headquarters Department[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (199)[...]of the story of l.\'lajor
cxpre.ssly, that I have no desire whatever to E. S. Godfrey, h[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (200)[...]few minutes to collect the men and then de-
"In accordance with this plan, all of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (201)[...]son by Reno.
soon sent back word that he could go no fur- "There were now many wounde[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (202)[...]horses, some ol them dotted along the path,
No one d reamed of the real explanation of[...]he 27th, while preparing to resist any geon De\~7olf; Lieutenant Harrington of the
attack whic[...]s soon as Reno's r etreat was assured,
jccturc, no officer or soldier who rode with the orde[...]vhat was read upon the ground, after Re.no had, in retreat, re.ached the bluff~,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (203)[...]come separated. He said that there were no Indians around Reno and
he did not expec[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (204)[...]ich Iio dead horses conclusions, but there is no · room to doubt
were founct. The Indi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (205)[...]HISTORY OF MONTANA

no11-treaty Indians i11to the belief that the r[...]hem wherever they were found." As a re- no one.
sult there were numerous skirmish[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (206)[...]ere friends. T heir Lo Lo Pass but there is no monument to im-
people had hunted together[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (207)[...]ians intended to remain for a few days.
there is no record that during that long period He a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (208)[...]re he was
extreme left, as we faced, and somewhat de- killed. He, with his little force of so[...]ng The main detachment of soldiers had de-
range riffes and superior discipline the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (209)[...]•

gloomy meditations possibly the unhappy el)d- Capt. Henry Romeyn, a participa[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (210)[...]ped of arms and ammuni-
to the cast of the camp. No sooner had they tion, except one Sergea[...]y him and his
of the Seventh Cavalry, whicli had no officers iollowcrs, return to do b[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (211)[...]on of
On the evening of October the first, the de- Indian warfare, the noblest of his rac[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (212)[...]died from malarial fever. Not
Joseph had no alternative but to surrender until 1884 were they[...]re three prin-
the young men who say yes or no. He who cipal reasons for the uprising; first the[...]s of the government to have the tribe
ha,·e no blankets. The little children are free•• cede[...]nd suffering
run away to the hills and have no blankets, no and third the mystic ghost dance of the
food. No one knows where they are-per- Prophet \Vovoka. Th[...]ehavior,"
the sun now . stands I will fight no more for• Dr. V. T. l\fcGillycuddy, agent at Ro[...]rvation. He organized
General Howard's aid de-camp states: the Indian police,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (213)[...]ndians
shows that the issue of beef at Pine Ridge de- realized this at once and he was dubbed b[...]his three
charge. In April, 189o, he informed the de- thousand Indians were dancing a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (214)[...]d when the proper time should arrive \Ve no,v come to the saddest of all the sad
but he was[...]Bad
out military aid. After deliberation it was de- Lands. They were intercepted and cut off by
te[...]uing the march to the agency and thence
offered no resistance at first but as he dressed to t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (215)[...]d· resentmen_t among the "There can be no question that the pursuit
men.[...]f Jamcs Mooney, who has made a find no explanation for the shelling of their
stud[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (216)[...]in pacity of guardian and agent. The war de-
order to get the 'ghost shirts,' and the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (217)[...]ire Sheridan said :
war and that our Army was no more respon- " 'During the last two year[...]offi-
of our great wars; though they brought el'ery cers and men throughout t~c dil'ision have[...]and commendable devotion
"The Army has had no part in making ,ir 10 duty, and deserve th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (218)[...]e history of the
renowned Ah'ar ~ue1. Cabc1.a de Vaca. trail." After . him came Bonn[...]it tr:wclcd \ ·V hitman and Spaling, Father De
11
Road to Oregon." This Trail[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (219)[...]the mai11-
tains and down Clark's Fork and had de- ten.ance of the posts along[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (220)[...]revailing belief that the Northern
way to the New El Dorado." Pacific Railroad[...]a from 1865 to 1870, I will state, that the
with no better success than their unfortu-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (221)[...]he eastern slope tinued to Preston, Texas, El Paso and Fort
• of the range was eve[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (222)[...]t the safety of the route before
its desperadoes. No twenty-four hours passed they expose travelers he[...]e inl'ite visits from the 'friendlies' by turning
no less a personage than Horace Greeley was the adva[...]and highwaymen all assailed him. history there is no feature more thrilling than
Col. A. K. :\I[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (223)[...]ia, over deck, a wave of the rider's hand but no reply,
a distance "of two thousand miles in[...]with perilous crossings of the plains wa~ no match for electricity and
s wollen an[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (224)[...]285
com~ was in no wise commehsuratc with the ~[onday, \[...]Salt
contains a most interesting table of s tage de- Lake in company with I-1. Parker, D[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (225)[...]Lake turning up
coach assured them there was no dangcr, - there with a heap of moncy,-a[...]shooting going on and pulled out for De1wcr. The committee at Vir-
started on the run[...]d Hole Station in the night two of us
by. The de.ad were taken care of and buried. m[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (226)[...]and c.1tch the robbers.' I knew the
,·, [ had no confidence in the men and never game was up and I[...]tle Dry Creek on a good swing-
driver. There were no passengers on the ing trot and as we got i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (227)[...]. where J met my old friend
set the team on a de..'td run. l\{y gun was Doc Terry and in co[...]for 1he patient to lessen his pain and
said 'no, are you hurt, on the inside?' I told asked t[...]een killed. He said haH per cent, but s\ill no allowance was made
he wanted money, bu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (228)[...]es till it is familiar to all. Fort Benton No mail route was established by the govern-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (229)[...]m Salt Lake to Cal ifornia and )Jontana was no longer a remote and iso-
in their s1>ecial mails,[...]from St. Paul to Last Chance Gulch lias de
fall carry letters and papers through in rcgu-[...]ol<I Fort
the same time? They have contracted to de- Be11ton and saw the steamboats[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (230)[...]ich he changed his tories; but there was no provision for a sub-
~laine charter, his director[...]st-clad grant section providing 'that no money should
shores of Puget Sound was cer[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (231)[...].
financial agents of the road, and the sole de- In sumtning up the story of the build[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (232)[...]hought of the
yers, journalists and pioneers have de,·oted dreamer long years before[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (233)[...]arned the leisure which every man looks for
By no means the least of the forces that who has borne[...]ion. All these more by the forces that govern the de,·elop-
states arc in direct touch with th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (234)[...]y to
able if converted into real assets for the de- 11elrose, a distance of 104 miles, and from[...]th- base the financing of their purchase and de-
west to be opened to settlement by tran[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (235)[...]and Company, was elected Vice President. At no
I was chosen General iWanager. This placed[...]e. The route to be trav-
building up the country. No sooner was a ersed was rich in f[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (236)[...]administrati,·e work and grounded pany, no individual or fi nancial house in
in right[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (237)[...]ne.s t value Company down to 1883. But it by no means
~CCei\'ccl. But the problems o f its[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (238)[...]al needs for probably fifty years to come. No
use of it during the time that it had been[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (239)[...]ible head of the Great
of the company unimpaired. No emergency Northern I will contribute hepceforth s[...]beyond which it would be fanciful to attempt one no longer holding the throttle valve or
to pro\'ide.[...]a dividend ever since 1882, and since and that it no longer depends upon the life
1900 the rate has re[...]i.\filwaukee and St. Paul
"The occasion permits no more thay1 this Railway Company was the la[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (240)[...]unliinited range were the plain. They were no't fed nor sheltered
established. Two facto[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (241)[...]ighest
\V. A. Clark in his centennial address de- being made a few weeks previous, when the
live[...]Montana Company bought of Downs & Allen
"No portion of the great West is better the old[...]nton or any of the three remote railway ste1> and no doubt it was the winter feeding
stations, he brought at least $30. After de• capacity of the range, as denionstrated[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (242)[...]'rustle.' The of range cattle requires no exaggeration to
poor animals--never in good fle[...]her in their rush
the en1ployes with the train. No one could to get into the business. The[...]llion head
fat and frisky. The story spread and no of range stock in Custer county alon[...]om Texas and manager with 'cow sense' but no idea of the
the Southwest. The change[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (243)[...]rc potential factors. New grass brings no stomach for further experience and the
gri[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (244)[...]the herb-
demand and prices began to look up. The de- age to spring up with great speed and v[...]s11,11shine, becoming thoroughly
the world knows no hardier animal than the cured and furni[...]all is
of his physical peculiarities is not to be de- '[...]and copious rains. When this happens the
tained no considerable importance until the later[...]he sheep did nothing of the kind. range. No one here pretends to put up enough
A comprehens[...]erewith given b)' A. a winter passes ,vith no hay fed at all, and
S. \~' ilcy, president[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (245)[...]ho herds
springs o r running creeks or rivers, as no rain- his sheep over wide ranges, constantly mo[...]y them, that they may select just what they de
until September or October; during the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (246)[...]ered by those next behind;
on wool. lt then being no longer profitable these in their turn arc[...]open plain, the bed being
will have Cotswolds and no other; others pre- always enveloped i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (247)[...]their own wills. a week at a time he may see no human face,
During two to five hours in the m[...]se herd-
they do not get divided, seeing that no part ers 'who watched their flocks by nigh[...]og must also see to ple?"
it that no wolf, coyote or wild cat gets a chance[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (248)[...]dent ~lo,iroe and
last named ground, there was no foundation President Adams repeatedly called the[...]ermi-
in its ·behalf. Our claim to Oregon was de- nation of the ten year truce, negotiations be-[...]should Jn his annual message to congress of De-
be drawn from the northwestern extrem[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (249)[...]the 13w office of Rufus P. Spaulding but no court was o rganiud within the district to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (250)[...]tude ; thence due west 011 the forty-fifth de-
quantities of gold nuggets subscribed by the[...]Vol. Ill.
away at the 3gc of cighty•two years. No more fil• • Org:inic Act of C[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (251)[...]mation and
\Vashington, employed in the foregoing de- apport ionmcnt but were deemed part of i\[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (252)[...]e United States and the provis- ing this session, no less than nine special legis-
ions of the act[...]ishing monopolistic in tendency, called forth the de-
these courts and prescribing the jurisdiction[...]ators of assembly (?f the territory, and approved De-
which were H. L. Hosmer, C. P . Higgins,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (253)[...]\'Cre to be elected. The Union party placed
that "no judge, whatever his powers or conse-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (254)[...]the apportionment bill passed teau) paid no taxes at all and the people re-
by the second ses[...]annulled to the legislature, "there is no county govern-
by congress, it is to be noticed t[...]es to the terri-
be held in September, 18<>7, but no attention tory. There is a larg[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (255)[...]rnor to appoint and commission an :ts~ no laws of particular importance were enacted .
scss[...]ons. \V. F. Sanders proceeded to
which there was no official record. Just what \\"ashing1on[...]territory. The act further provided that no
proclamation issued, of amending the ele[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (256)[...]act the salaries of the chief he had no recolle<:tion o f what he had said ;
just[...]k, an o1d-time
some of the leaders of the De:mocratic party resident of B utte[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (257)[...]be true at that time were sent, there being no jails in
that Thomas Francis l\1eagher had fallen[...]ardoned:' at least Daniels got back to Helena
but no clue was ever found until Diamond be[...]containing "So far as I know there was no great feel•
much that throws light on pi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (258)[...]expecting
Iall; however that may be, it is absurd no,\• to sec the boat, I sat on the dcck for[...]eputed to be able to
vation of law and order, had no further cause navigate a light dew.
to mai[...]e Captain
:Meagher, scouted the Diamond story and-de- Howe discharged a cargo of mules[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (259)[...]- that he was deranged. I-le was loudly de-
zens and sojourners in that unique and th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (260)[...]s all.
of other causes, but General i\ieagher had no She lived on the same street near me in Vir[...]he office of the Indian j< As there was · no telegraph, the news of
agent, oppo~ite the G. A.[...]per- the event went by mail that night. No ~r-
haps 50 yards distant, where I· wrote a lett[...]they had been related to me, and could see no
There was a colored man, one of the[...]Greeley, who once said to me that General
no wished-for sight or sound. The search[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (261)[...]hey had1 been anulled. Many nulled and thereunder no corporations could
of the acts passed by[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (262)[...]President Grant appointed as that no appointee of the governor could hold
his succes[...]on but
w3S born· near Pittsb\1rgh. Pcnnsyh':mia, No,·ember little. ln 1$.tt he went to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (263)[...]d cstab• Ohio he taught school and de\'oted his leisure to
lishcd his residence[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (264)[...]ed field
to the command of the &econd brig-a.de which was hc;i;dquartcrs, giving[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (265)[...]tion was not presented to the people for de-
the passage of such an act ; and he urged the[...]it should be changed to Helena was to be de-
ing for the formation of railroad corpora[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (266)[...]der 13th, adjourning February :n, 1879. No
mwigable tl\e Ycllow·s tone. and Missouri[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (267)[...]of congress passed in 188o, extending
Helena, but no steps had been taken by the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (268)[...]29th, adjourning September 14, 1887. No
the general laws of the territory in force at[...]y and state, his term of office in 1844, he was el«ted to the
~lthougb, in 1884 he was a del[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (269)[...]ast terri- tion discloses the steady growth, de,·elopmem
torial assembly granted the conu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (270)[...]en to all .the children
in iorm, should make no distinction in civil of the state and free[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (271)[...]ch discussion. As finally agreed to it pro•
is no record, the original document being vided that mi[...]ons for the taxation of sur•
There can be found no eddence of its ever face ground when used for oth[...]con• it from its share of taxation. \Vhen thus de·
gress by Hon. J. K : Toole, the,, delega[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (272)[...]o n this sub- then fully appreciated, and no action was taken
ject was incorporated i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (273)[...]f the state were Flathe.ad, Valley,
that there be no expenditures for buildings un- Teton, Ravalli and[...]ate. The Democrats c:laimed to have been
in \~asc no city secured a majority of the votes, elected for[...]ral days, which the residents of Helena they took no chances and declined to draw
did not enjoy, by in[...]the medium resentati,:es sent to the senate, but no action
of the elections provided.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (274)[...]ment. United States senators followed and no laws
Goddard also argued against burdening the[...]ses until the third
entered the galaxy of states, no longer embar- session should convene.
rassed[...]n each dollar of the valuation
growth; and it was no longer to be governed of all such property except such as was de-
A History of Montana Volume 1 (275)[...]the public domain, open to location and It is by no means certain that this contro,·ersy[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (276)[...]known as the \.Yestern
only and . prescribed that no such_ engineer State Prison. The p[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (277)[...]so that mode of producing testimony by affidavit, de
they would be available by the date the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (278)[...]repealed
sion was provided by law and its duties de• in part and revised and amended to b[...]nd grant
propriations for the fiscal years ending De- commission was amended to enable the st[...]gress
of the executive, judidal and Jegislath•e de- passed June 11, 18961 whereunder the rec[...]de, and
Yellowstone and Custer counties were re•de• while hoisting and lowering men, the Jaw pre•
fined and established. , House bill No. 17, pro• scribed that these doors[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (279)[...].Cd to take necessary
tion of the health of men el'nptoyed itt under- steps to amend the cons[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (280)[...]is- was not regularly passed, and to cure the de-
trict judge temporarily to hold court in another[...]oyee
th·e assembly into extraordinary session in De- to patronize "company boarding houses[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (281)[...]of down. He called attention to a popular de-
this session was that whereby the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (282)[...]tempore, governor, dated December 8th, following, de-
or if a qualified district judge should be calle[...]ch 2, 1905 passed over one hundred and
case, then no change of place of trial should fifty laws[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (283)[...]by direct vote at a pri- within the state. No prosecutions were ever
mary election and to prov[...]mended and corporations organ- erators. No employe named in the act was
ized under th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (284)[...]unties of the state that had adopted the de,·elo11. protect and promote the sheep ind[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (285)[...]ct as passed pcm1it-
By sCnatc joint reSotution No. I this session ting him to be sued a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (286)[...]plicable to 121h day of February in each year was de-
jailors in coumies coming within the a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (287)[...]relator, against O'Leary, respondent, was de-
as might be prescribed by law, and such s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (288)[...]nd pre- semblies to that date. It would serve no use-
scribed the duties of the state b[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (289)[...]e wings of the state capital build-
the act, that no such employe, injured or ing. The board of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (290)[...]authorized to designate a suitable spe- ganized. No new county could be established
cialis[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (291)[...]of the legislative
to the <1ualified vote rs for de.cision, the cam- assemblies of i\fontana were i[...]1913,
pro\'ing inadequate to produce the results de- each branch occupying, for the first time,[...]in of selecting a United States senator was no
A History of Montana Volume 1 (292)[...]nd lower
servant, then to his family or surviving de- branches of the assembly together o[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (293)[...]al to a court of com1>etent juris- House Bill No. 278, introdue<d by Re1>r<•
d iction, b[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (294)[...]state would be uniform.
measures.
House Bill No. 105, introduced by Repre- P rovis[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (295)[...]ing corr«t weights on all grain that no new counties should be established
weighed[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (296)[...]t without that approval of the same/'
combination no one of the bills would have Unde[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (297)[...]on-
tana (and other corporations specifically de- ment or both.
scribed in the act and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (298)[...]es, fire dis-
10 codify all existing laws, remedy de fects tricts and thickly seuled or bu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (299)[...]ents mentioned
roads. Theretofore, 1\lontana had no adequate were compelled to furnish suitable[...]ind
fathered by Senator Abbott, for it plac_e d no. shields only. Two bills, introduced by Sena-[...]peed equipped wich certain specified braking de-
no greater than was reasonable and proper, "[...]heat~.
· Under the largey act, chauffeurs, also, de- Among a number of miscellaneous laws e[...]ended and e~asculatcd. Under the
alcered and re-de6ncd. law passe[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (300)[...]defined . By the provisions of House Bill No.
act by line not less than $200.00 nor to ex-[...]~ teen years, and the crime of rape newly de-
ers, pursuant to a measure introduced by[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (301)[...]instruction · in the different educational de• tana Agricultural Experimental Station.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (302)[...]of the age of twenty-~ne
in .the s tate, and no such exhibitions could be years or over, poss[...]ded that ten law; provided, first, that no person convicted
per cent of the total gross[...]ncident to adoption of this constitution no person ex-
the operation of the law we[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (303)[...]thirteenth be available during the period named. No pre-
session were the subject-of much disc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (304)[...]come from southern crs oi rebellion, felt no little sym{><\thy with
states and naturally w[...]ose· friends ha\'e deserted them and they no longer
who were to participate in Mont[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (305)[...]the State Historical Society
tween them there is no middle ground. The give ll1cLean 4,66[...]- con\'ened al Bannack on the 12th day of De-
relevant issues controlled political results. In[...]n Lexington, ·Mis•
"'as concerned. T here was no corporate in- souri. £o 1863 he[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (306)[...]ved in orator supposes that it is an easy task to de
1

Montana after th[...]is office. In 1\.1'.ontana, and I can conceive of no worse place
the month of September, 1&i6, there[...]ial Convention, where he was ctiosen it is deemed no breach of propriety for a
to adva<:ate C[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (307)[...]s per-
\Vashington · in those turbulent times by de- sona l popularity had carried him through t[...]the territory. He was
during the winter of 1867. No laws enacted a lawyer of eminence and a g[...]who
fourth session ·continued its labors until De- was elected over l'llr. Toole and, for[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (308)[...], and securing the p lace in 1873, was ma.de primarily so that th~
passage of a bill pr[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (309)[...]received the support of Republicans who de-
E. D. Leavitt 3 the Republican nominee lor[...]tion he entered th:: fater y1.·ars he h:1el not ,:1.c:-ti\'ely engaged in the J)r:\c-
Western[...]ncnt in his J)rofcs.sion and, until his de:tth, enjoyed
drafted the present state con[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (310)[...]tana was the natural highway through the
kin,• no minated by the Republicans, was de- rttountains to She northwcstci-n coast; that
feated by ~iaginnis ·in the election Of No,iern- every railroad begun in[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (311)[...]st to 17,300 cast for his opponent. At this el~-
the Indians, being instrumental in bringing[...]nd and it was then officially announced that no
occupation, thereby taking this vast section[...]coun-
out of the control of federal officials who de- ty had been furnished in accordance[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (312)no clerical duties, but signed
ent that upon the rec[...]name of every elector should be pro•
Democrats. No satisfactory conclusion can be nounced in[...]Penny•
sworn duty courageously and honestly to de- cook, No. t; John Morrison, No. 2; \Vitliam
termine the issue,. and its decision must form O'Reagan, No._3; then the two clerks, Thoma$
A History of Montana Volume 1 (313)[...]405
O'Kcefe, No. 4, and A. N. Anderson, l\o. 5. them by[...]seven ,·01cs ver Bow county. On the 22nd of No)·cmher,
all cast by electors whose names began w[...]said legislati,·e assembly shall meet, :111d no
was incumbent on Sullivan, claiming the benefit[...]or the laws to designate
them. The record showing no proof upon this such place of meeting ;[...]neral Election Laws of ~lon-
said representatives no controversy arose. but tana, by the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (314)[...]hich set of representatives
governor, there being no contests in the upper from Silver Bo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (315)[...]and the dc:1dlock ing a moiety, but no t a majo rity as required
continued to prevail.[...]of ninctcell he went to Philadelphia being no qualifi ed sergeant-at-arms of this
and secured a[...]t.:governor he was person, when there is no sergeant-at-arms, to
<:l«ted by the Repub[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (316)[...]d of the two parties would be waged and de-
Parbcrry and the scrgeant•at•arms was cn-[...]ballot for'the other United States senator no
those present but not voting constituted a qu<r[...]ded the ayes and noes, was declared duly el<:<:ted as the first senator
but the pres[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (317)[...]iinc he removed publican h6use was the legal one, no laws
to Tennessee and thence 10 Ark;:msas.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (318)[...]e came to Montana :;md such until No\'Cmbcr 8. 1 ~. Upon the admitt3ttCC
located in Vi[...]justice :i.nd scr\·cd until 1&;3. In the No\•cmbcr
President Grant United St:atcs at[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (319)[...]he struggle the Popnlists and thereby it de\'Oh'ed upon the fourth as-
dropped their caucus n[...]were Llt\• In the general election held No\'embcr 6,
w:weringly cast. This situ:i.tion block[...]taking us back to early territorial · days. m:.y
No successor to Senator Sanders had been[...]er•
cancy, but the senate of th e United States de- ton, the first governor, had the ab[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (320)[...]ined the capital. Another court hacl no jurisdiction. The entire '.\lon-
\'Ote was taken[...]tana territorial supreme court, meantime, de
City again prevailed.[...]wrote and published a \'Uy intcrc:Sting nO\'cl which
dcfond CinCh1nati. which was thrcatt-ne[...]ara Lincoln,"
fcdc-ratc lc-ader, Kirby Smith, \Va.de immc-diately ten• and. attho"ugh writt[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (321)[...]naconda, . and Willian; A. Clark,
there sl:all be no choice of location at said elec- the suppor[...]showed the estimate of him was
test at the first el'cetion of 1892.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (322)[...]nowledge or mining
world. At that time there were no smelting p'3nts vi11dic:ucd hv th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (323)[...]remonstrating against his being seated. A
ticket. No other parties nominated a candidate later[...]1854- In the public
out importance. There was no senator to sc:hools of his nati\[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (324)[...]the laws of i\1ontana defining and punishing or no property. Borrowing $25 he went to
cr[...]a witness called by Senator Clark in his de- a box in his house, but he had no knowledge
fense, testified tha[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (325)[...]. Clark denied this statement made by
He produced no documents to confirm his Hewitt, and \[...]nied these statements. vVhite-
$400. He produced no writing showing how side testifie[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (326)[...]r career in lllontana, declaring he had in no
Clark had little or nothing to do with the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (327)[...]time but also the judicial and legislati,·e de-
of Governor Robert B. Smith from the State,[...]als is- thro,igh his masterful efforts to de,·elop the
sued by Lieutenant-Gov~rnor Spr[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (328)[...]he ded individuals and politics. It was no longer
old common law rule that confined[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (329)[...]he appointed
Democrat to succeed Judge Lindsay in No- Thomas R. Hinds, recei[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (330)[...]ceedings that he had been offered
had no right to these ore bodies in dispute.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (331)[...]aving been paid for his decision. to listen in no amiable frame of mind towaras
It was claimed that[...]ttle all
a new trial. It fell into Judge Clancy's de- disputes. The Amalgamated ignored t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (332)[...]o the capitol building. Although there was no sen-
senate for the f ull term to succeed Tho[...]Im-
intervention of a caucus, but it was not de- peachment proceed,ings were instituted agai[...]'\ naconda :md
In the general election held No,·embtr 6th, Great Falls. It worked im[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (333)[...]is day, the assembly in
at the- election held No\'embcr 3rd, 19()8, re• joint session[...]and lattr began to pra.cticc his pro- on their no1nination to vote for the candi-
(~ssion at Bo[...]the De~1ocrats, but one, then absent, and all[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (334)[...]Other statutes, reflecting -the growth and de-[...]y received 23,505 votes and Allen in el·ecting a member to the lower house.
19,73[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (335)[...]s favorable to the absentee stockholders No. i I East Park Street. The charter mem-
of the la[...]l-
for, first, by the social forces of capitalist de- ena, Chico, Livingston and Bozeman, and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (336)[...]gorously prose:
the conduct of party affairs, had de- cuted. T he large increase[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (337)[...]the
first prospectors. These men with little or no quartz "1ines in i\•lontana is almost con•
c[...]upposed rich lodes
acter of mining reta_rded its de,•elopment. led, in many instances, to di[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (338)[...]must be a radical change in
a sensation which has no parallel since the the prevalen[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (339)[...]ulches arc being worked there; and
per ton, here no ore can be reduced to pay ex- Edgerton an[...]yet in the infancy of development, and at no
and at its head are now found the richest[...]re by tunnels. iiost of the mines
1 believe, that no better-defined or richer leads I have[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (340)[...]any part of the world will yield such was no Garden of the Gods, bu_t rather a gro-
large ret[...]here to cajole the senses into idleness; no per·
near a long, low hill, wooded with clumps o[...]s low of kine and tinkle of distant bell; no amor-
of the early days. The hill itself was the[...]a valley or "Aat," to stagnation. No! Rather stern, muscle•bear-
Slretchin,g[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (341)[...]sunk f9r four or five feet. Close by were elk and de\'eloped into real cities soon dropped
antlers, wh[...]he next Mountain District was divided, and claims No.
sixty days they ran a development tunnel[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (342)[...]e Some of the mines located in the period of de-
in full blast.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (343)[...]istory of .Butte the metallurgical cus Daly's de,·clopmcnt of the Anaconda l\1ine.
advance[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (344)[...]rged for smelting, they were, never-
per industry no ore bodies were believed to theless, nomi[...]Villiam Penn, the Neptune, the Stewart
1877, gave no profit to the shipper after min- and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (345)[...]which he made his
Societc /111011yme des .~li11cs de Lc.ri119to11, first itl\'estments. On the 11 th o[...]e, 011t of which transac-
the "B and '.\1," their de,·iations in consequence tion grew other i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (346)[...]ge; to care for the sick
rumor, emanating from no known source and and injured, and fin[...]Had these toilers
become a "one man camp," with no competi- not enjoyed beauti[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (347)[...]arc shunned by purely for its own members. No miner's
their fellow workers.[...]seen in the barren, smoke-sta ined ap- no worthy .cause. be it local or otherwise, is
proac[...]sorbed by the greater corporation.
of Virgil. But no such classical meditations ?.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (348)[...]a The Amalgamated Company has steadily de-
good ,,\ill, and to the astonishment and[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (349)[...]res of places
from 1 ½ to s per cent. There are no other the mineralized rock is exposed o[...]build-
Duluth i\1ining Company, with a view 10 de- iogs for this process have recently bee[...]to-
a depth of at least 1,000 feet, in order to de- matically and b)' gravity through ih[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (350)[...]owned by 'l'V. A. Clark, also revealed zinc de-
periments along this line have be[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (351)[...]ditional
before any substantial amount of lateral de- territory. To meet these requirements th[...]develop-
from the 8oo to 1f1e 1,6oo foot levels. No ment and to in a large measure acquire[...]ant
ated irregularly on ores taken ·1~rgely from de- for determining the most economical a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (352)[...]f valuable additional ore bodies.
1,000 foot te,·el. Stations have been estab• ."The mill is[...]feet. ports the coarsely crushed ore to a coarse
No work has been done on the , ,.;oo foot cn1shing p[...]ist of
silver. Practically all of this tonnage is de- concentrating tables, classifiers and jigs and
A History of Montana Volume 1 (353)[...]t satisfac• means of wells, there need be no fear of a per-
tory method of recovering the valu[...]at units may be added and the has been no forcing. An electrically driven
capacity increased as mine conditions ,nay de- pump will be installed at the wells and the[...]een "For the past 15 months, or since the de-
proved highly successful.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (354)[...]tates,
of the district, for in the pioneer days no or 13.8 per cent of that of the w[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (355)no way of differentiat-
Ou[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (356)[...]r values." creek, was de.signed to treat five hundred tons[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (357)[...]n of 740 feet were \l\lilliam i\Iayger and George De,-
above the furnaces. The flue system incl[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (358)[...]Year,
extensive, but as yet has been but slightly de-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (359)[...]Gallatin county has not been cxtensi,·ely de-
Boulder, upo n the dumps of which can be veloped for mineral de.posits, though it is
found ore containing preciou[...]ides
portation in order to suc<:cssfully work and de• numerous short tunnels, surface cuts and pits.[...]ooke City, among the most promising and the least de-
there can be no question but what one of the veloped of l\[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (360)[...]ons in 18i9, the Algonquin in 1882. At pended for de,·elopment about $7,i6o. On
the dates not[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (361)[...]ek district, was organized under
"At that date No. 1 tunnel had been driven the laws of the state in May, 1886, by Charles
only 186 feet; tunnel No. 2, 443 feet, tapping D. McLure, Paul A. Fus[...]amp chloridizing dry crushing mill in the
driving No. 2 tunnel, was because there had B[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (362)[...]g, Black
the Queen of the Hills. Next in point of de- Friday and the Ohio Keating which[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (363)[...]on character and producing mines have been de~
(silver and gold) and the Eagle !\fountain[...]group ( sih'er
tricts have been sufficiently de\'elopcd to war• and gold); the Blow[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (364)[...]The ?v[ontana State i\lining Company is de-
percentage of copper) ; the Groundhog Claim[...]ce the ores of the of transportation ma'de the venture profitless.
mmc.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (365)[...]Mar-
This concern spent o,,er $300,000 in the de- . tinsdale at the Copper State mine. .[...]eralized country-not excelled in the state. · No
i.\'leagher county contained some of the ri[...]taken over by this 'county. The present de-
consisting of five claims; namely, the Cumbe[...]t and that it will, in the near future, ha\'t
No. 2 1 the l\1onumcnt and the Consequence,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (366)[...]ow oriental amethyst and the oriental ruby. No
copper, gold and silver; the Triangle ( co[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (367)[...]d be deaned and made a~· lustrou~ had no use for such baubles." J. A. 11-fae-
as new by th[...]e, a town
found in the rocks from which they were de- on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (368)[...]the veins and material." no cloudbursts occurred to damage the ditch
i\'Ion[...]ey: ties mentioned all occur in placer gra,·el de-[...]The total
menced oper~tions in July, 1909, but as no[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (369)[...]f darker color late, however, little or no attention has been
resembling the grain of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (370)[...]ntains.
phosphate fields in the world. Phosphate de- "All but three counties, Silv~rbow, Sand-[...]two years ers and Jefferson, have coal or lignite de-
ago or more, and after careful e;amil)ation pos[...]nties. · a blessing. No timber to speak of within
An authority writes[...]duced about 1,500,000 tons of coal and lig-
"No date has been. fixed for opening the nite[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (371)[...]or less lignite. Vast <leposits ·are awaiting de-
11iles City, had a relative efficienc[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (372)[...]of the most productive fields in the
road, little de,·elopment work has been done. state. J[...]on of the
the Bighorn Basin F ield of that state. No Larainie and belongs to the s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (373)[...]·Runv VALLEY FIELD
lows:
No. of Thickness About 30 m[...]ing coal. no mines of commercial value yet opened.
Laramie ...[...]within their borders. The field runs almost
or no systematic prospecting has ever been[...]rt of the field yields and Clark coun_ty will de"elop good mines
coking coal while a portio[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (374)[...]county and has three of the Smith River. No thorough prospect-
distinct areas. First the Nort[...]l and will
There are several workable scams, but no com-
mercial mines are in ·operation· h[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (375)[...]fire in 1911, produced no zinc, although ex-
mines at Butte, especially[...]road into the district, and con-
There was no important change in lead[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (376)[...]rist mill in 1845. The factories have engaged no .considerable. share
stOnes were imported from An[...]of i\1ontana is like tbat of all primitive no inconsiderable source[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (377)[...]supply duction for the current year: but as no such
home consumption. J\t this time there were[...]ls in operation, giving an annual l\lontana no official state statistics of crop pro•
product[...]he soil. I ndecd, reports from the s.~me sources. No estimate
with in the past few years ?-lontana has[...]Deer tcm of collecting crop statistics which the De-
Lodge, Blackfoot, Jocko, Iicllgate and Bitter pa[...]vation
capable of producing man·clous crops, but no increases each year at a rate almost unpre[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (378)[...]h- The soil in the benches, which are the de-[...]volcanic ash. To the
to the extent that they are no menace to tHc
orchards.[...]ortance that not seasons very little or no irrigation is used m
only the codling n1oth, but[...]necessa ry adjuncts for the de,•elopment of high
the towns and cities of the s[...]tana.
oughly spraying to the extent thpt it is of no It is equally true in fruits grown[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (379)[...]t, Baldwin,
can be in every community, there is no county Grimes, Golden, Jonathan, Sweet Bou[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (380)[...]J II this class we find such varieties as the De there is located the largest vineyard[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (381)[...]the . given good culture, if the best results arc de-
English varieties are grown, some preferring sired. There is no branch of the fruit industry
the Keepsake[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (382)[...]. grasses and forage crops conducive to the de-
any state in the northwest.[...]other
business it is to inspect all nursery stock de-[...]1912 says that
Although the great ranges are no more[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (383)[...]8.130,00,
De
A History of Montana Volume 1 (384)[...]EAR. No. Sh«1> &stimittd Po-u.n[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (385)[...]operations of ·indh•idual com- No state can oficr better opportunities for[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (386)No.) ••
Primu1 hone•J)(>wcr .....••[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (387)[...]$ Po1rrLANO CEMENT Perhaps no one £actor has had more to do
The cem[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (388)[...]ff lands, of 35,- for public inst.itutions. No State land can be[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (389)[...]tional entry of con-
been appraised. If there is no offer to buy tiguous lands in amount sufficient[...]orting to unusual ,ncthods of cul- There is no single factor of n1ore import•
tivation, such[...]tana agricul•
·farming, and for which there is no known tural resources than irrigation. Although i[...]y means of converting millions
land offices, and no entry can be allowed until of acres into profitab[...]n for their being was to supply the hungry white
no event exceed one and one-half mi les in me[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (390)[...]Arca un;appropriat«I and unreserved.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (391)[...]s very .,u«osf11I, Jn it, literal
knse there uc- no bnds in Mont•1ia that the word ll.rid d«eTibu.[...]the supervision of state authorities and no
private capital to engage in."[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (392)[...]513
List No. 1 • .. -~ ...•.•.....•[...]. 10,472.88 Approved.
List No. 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • Big T[...]7,864.78 Approved.
List No. 3· • • • • · · · · · : · · · ·[...]I 1,153-73 Approved.
List No. 7 . ....... . .. • • • • • •[...]. 4,585.23 Approved.
List No. 8 ...... . ... .... .. . Valier[...]. 6o,461.41 Approved.
List No. 9 . ....... • • • • • • • • •[...]1,36o.oo Approved.
List No. IO... . .........•.• Tet[...]55,393.83 Not Approved.
List No. 11. . ... ..... ..... . Big Tim[...]1,709.32 Approved.
List No. 12 ... : ..... ....... . Valier[...]3,596.58 Approved.
List No. 13 ..... • .... • • .. • •[...]6,825.01 Not• Approved.
List No. 21 ............... . F!atwil[...]233,670.84 acres
.Patented land in List No. 1 ..•..... . ..... .... .. ....[...]8,192.88 .acres
Patented land in List No. 2 ••••.. . •. ...[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (393)[...]Conrad-a succession of fine
ccssful that there is no room to doubt that in a farms will ext[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (394)[...]in
1911, and 1912 have made possible greater de- connection therewith follows:
velopmen[...]ith a stor-
be expended in that state.) (That no entry age capacity of 853 acre-feet, is projected to
shall be hereafter made and no entryman shall be located in the vi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (395)[...]ll
works in ten annual installments. • The de- garden near the house, and from the two[...]x hogs and chickens, paid all of the farmer's
de.sire to do so, to subdivide their entries,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (396)[...]he upper and lower St. l'l'lary
J\C8ICULTURAL ,\NO CLIMATIC CONDITIONS lakes, led princi1)al[...]river flows northward from the lower lake
Arca under water right applications, season[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (397)[...]305,000; mean, 422,000. At international line
No public notice has been issued announc- ([...]and Canadian ity, 141,815 acre-feet; no spillway.
Pacific.[...]burne lakes-type, earth. fill; height not de-
WATER SUPPLY[...]eight, 33 feet; length of crest, 15,135 feet;
Arca of drainage basin: St. Mary lakes[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (398)[...]o. '
feet; no miles with capacities from 50 to 300[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (399)[...]un diverted, of which I 1,38o acre-feet was de-
reservoir into Sun Ri,•er Slope cana[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (400)[...]Arca under water-right applications, season[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (401)[...]templated. The possible de\'elopment is 122,-
First irrigation by R[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (402)[...]N., Rs. s to 10 vV.; ACRlCULTUR.·\I. ,,NO CLIM;\ TlC CONOITION'S
29 N., R. 8 \V. ; Rs. 6 to[...]. 6 and 7 \V., N{ontana Meridian. Arca for which, the Service is prepared to
Ra[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (403)[...]igated was 46.1 per cent of the
issued, there are no later authentic figures at improved land in fam1s[...]2,205,165 ...........
Arca included in projects., •• ; •• ,.,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (404)[...]r cent of incident to stock raising and there was nO in-
the total; irrigation districts, 4,912[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (405)[...]ducti\•C lands otherwise of little or no ,•alue,
ning streams and from welts."[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (406)[...]vable from that stream
mer grazing lands. Perhaps no one state em- Aow, which when transformed into el[...]or transportation and manufacturing
and certainly no other state equals 1\lontana purposes that[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (407)[...]the same time the high• ing June 30, 1912.
est de,•c1opment of Joe-al -industries is stinr[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (408)[...]imber cut in the na- Forest Arca Acres o(Tinlbcr
tional forests of :\[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (409)[...]vidual prosperi,y and detrimental to ihe de-
take the protection or their holdings[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (410)[...]agreeable
of its power at the Great Falls is ably de- sound of a fall of water." Towards the pla[...]this sojourn and, a year later, when
WATER POWER DE\'ELOPMENT OF TUE GREAT[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (411)[...]a s<.:rics of cataracts, with intervening the de,·elopment of power on a large sc.alc
rapi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (412)[...]com-
aiid will be the site of the ne"t power de- motion. The dam is founded on solid rock
vel[...]throughout its entire length.
No ex..-avation wns required for the dam[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (413)[...]se oC<'.'.asions the turbines were opened
c.annot De suddenly started, nor when it is up_to full gate with nono
the variations in velocity demanded by the[...]apply gradually to the water in the and no trembling or vibration indicating an
main pipes.[...]directly to the turbines. pressure, and no damage was done or sign of
The reservoir a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (414)[...]transmitted 152 miles,
rator voltage of 6,6oo and no step-up trans- and the total length of single l[...]olts and transmitted to Butte and ors are No. 0. B. & S. gauge, hard drawn
Anaconda, a distanc[...]ge from time to time. The ann, and there arc no transpositions in either
transformers are[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (415)[...]ll adapted to the use of sus-
phone circuit is of No. 10 B. & S. gauge, hard pension insula[...]rmer com- very uneconomical, and it has long been de-
partments are located the· electrolytic[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (416)[...]day and 365 days in the year. There arc no
With these receivers connected to the hoist- lighting peaks and there is no appreciable dif-
ing system, not only will the lo[...]and Yellowstone rivers, with a
stant. This is of no small advantage to the total capaci[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (417)[...]oal
developments. As the country grows, the de- each year conserve the resources o[...]th the necess!tY of an expensive dam,
No de.finite figures can be given which will and made the de,•elopment exceptionally
show the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (418)[...]hat the territorial legisla- Clerk of District No. 1, Madison county, I am
ture co~vencd. The tru[...]In Beaverhead county, I learn indirectly, no
then called, was i\1r: Thrasher.[...]e report of A. l\l. S. Carpenter, fourth No schools have ever been organi1.cd in
superinten[...]Madison county; but aside from District No.[...]1867. I found Th omas F•. CampbeJI ...... 186;
no reports from County Superintendents in the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (419)[...]l 1893 that the course in applied science. No quarters. had,
legislature provided for th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (420)[...]er small
in applied science was developed into a de- population and limited wealth could h[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (421)[...]sed both courses in business and journalism and a de-
houses by a large majority. The Leighton bill p[...]t to be one institution. makers.
There was to be no duplication of cours~s, and The prosp[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (422)[...]e of section 17 of the act
This national crisis no doubt led our wisest declares that these lan[...], scientific and classical was made. Congress had no money to give,
schools whkh had done so mu[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (423)[...]ool of States ·supreme court, which affirmed the de-
Mines for the current years was thirty-tw[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (424)[...]There ,~·as no authority for the creation of
In vi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (425)[...]in this school. It can be said that in all de-
pense with the preparatory department.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (426)[...]and the experiment station The college had no buildings and the in-
$30,000.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (427)[...]tution is located at l\!iles City to which de-
$20,000. Upon the buildings, an insurance of[...]y of this
teachers )\•ere required, and we have no one institution consists of 1o8 acres of la[...]':t.-Iethodist Episcopal church but it is in no
Norn1al College will be enabled ·to contr[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (428)[...]ngs citizens. ~1r. Losekamp, who was the
it is in no sense of the word sectarian. Its au[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (429)[...]of the institution realize that There arc no entrance requirements. Stu-
the class-room work[...]gift of i\1r. James J. Hill, who is deeply no aid from the state. All that it has h~s be[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (430)[...]RELIGION-THE CHURCHES

There is no state in the Union in which the to the Catho[...]ospital in what had been the former court-
1863 no scttlc.mcnt of white people existed house of Virg[...]ate the
that General Thomas Francis l\lieagher de- increasing Catholic population. In 1869 F[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (431)[...]ith its development in the Episcopal See.
and was no less favor:lbly impressed than[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (432)[...]Catholic population, the bishop had to nessed the de,·otion of the clergy, the • piety
trave[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (433)[...]he Lord. The irr. Stoddard remaining until No,·ember when
result of his efforts is a g[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (434)[...]saloons, billiard halls and log bishop and it was no wonder that Bishop Tut•
cabins, travelin[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (435)[...]fears a nd struggles which make up so
church had no traditions-in ) lontana. I mean large a part of t[...]earth, while a new ~lontana has arisen,
was in•no doubt, for the bishop "stayed with" and that new[...]re ardu- Ilishop Brewer wrote in 1894: "No one
ous and less impressive in statisti[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (436)[...]Con- through the eighth grade. Scholars who de-
ference was organiicd. In 1892, the Great[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (437)[...]ssigned to
joining camps and ranches. There was no the eastern circuit with Bozeman for head-
Presbytery, no church, no Sabbath when I quarters. He was la$! heard from s[...]ary, at Bozeman, opening
Early Organization. No permanent re• the school in 1872. In 187[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (438)[...]ties by which members of society courts, and knew no law except the law of
are restrained. Systems of[...]In a sense each department of our ing in every m~de rendered possible by their
government is as important as either of the own resources, under no munic.ipal Jaw and
other two, because each is essential to the with no restraint except that of ·superior phys-
existen[...]and purity of the most interesting consequence by no law, and not agreed as to whence tiie
to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (439)[...]states yet to be, more venturesome than Colu.,n.. no\ final. From the decision of these tribunals[...]nd regulations, being
tion or purchase. There was no means of much the same in «?3-Ch district, very[...]these rules and regulations of the
"There was no law defining a mining claim, miners were recogniz[...]f mining law is
and that without delay. There was no legisla- but an instance and example of how the l[...]lation.
tion and disposal of mining claims, after de- and her people organiied their own govern[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (440)[...]. written opinions of the judges of all cases de
· The miners' court was the result of the nec[...]overy of gold attracted
experienced little or no jurisdiction in that thither not only th[...]r crim-
then seat of government. None of the de- inals and murderers or the well-di[...]urt prior to that time were in writ- were no courts or officers to prese¥ve order or[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (441)[...]HISTORY OF MONTANA

prcscnation. They acted with de1ibcration. in each of these districts[...]mes, ,,·.here judge and jury there was no law governing except the organic
tl'icd men for c[...]in 1864. There had at tha.t thne been no meet-
tended by the well disposed people a[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (442)[...]t to be frightened, midnight agency, with no further_explanation
nor was he willing to neg[...]cannot
to secu re the ends of justice. Let it no longer shrink, though "its discharge be painfu[...]neces-
of their duties, there is, and can be, no valid sity compelled heretofore, no such necessity
excuse for outside, irr[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (443)[...]585
nation of the early de<:isions of the supreme tice Hosmer; Deer L[...]ted as Meagher and ~<fusselshell
and also . that no judge should sit in the su- counties, were[...]. Wade writes thus: "It
were decided. There were no libraries at the is unfortunate that these justices, during their
time and no pre<:edent for many of the intri- period of office, delivered no opinions in writ-[...]•
cate questions submitted and by the court de- ing, for thereby their valuable' services[...]appropriation of water for
judicial districts. No re<:ord of any such ap- the purpose o[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (444)[...]e there Judge Hosmer took up his residence. No
end of the year 1866, but all Jaws passed by[...]former questions for which there were no precedents.
homes in the states whcnc-e . they came, and T he criminals had been de-alt with by the sum-
resumed the practice of[...]sident . _tions at once pre.s ented themselves. No legis-
had appointed Lorenzo P. Willi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (445)[...]tutes of the cording to law were void. There were no
last legislative session of the territory of Idah[...]s in danger of destruction by fre- and there were no revenue stamps to be had:
quent and general handl[...]ng whether under legislative enactment. The court de-
the payment should be ln gold dust or treasury cided in favor of Hagerman by a majority de-
notes. The court deeided that where a c[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (446)[...]institution at one time. Between the twentieth of De-
studied law with his father, Judge Horace cem[...]d on May the grand jtfry had a ringing warning to el'il
:?2d, 1$87.
Lyman E. i\1unson wa[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (447)[...]Thomas him. This you declined to do. I therefore de-
Francis Meagher, Acting Governor of the sire to[...]an open letter ad- as a politicia1i I should take no notice of the
dressed to the acting govern[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (448)[...]RY OF '.\IONTANA

it to notice. That there may be no misunder- alor on the trial, sentence,[...]offense than that of murder ( a jury
assembly was no doubt a great factor in caus- hav[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (449)[...]So far as the court records show no opinion
"Herc the wrong done by the gove[...]ginia
who had shared the hopes of those who de- City and Helena of that time print, however,[...]returned to the territory. Froni the begin-
no authority to do so; but told him to ma~e the ning[...]ication of
and, to be sure that there were no designs the opinions of the judges of the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (450)[...]nk the· supply inexhaustible, and like there was no means of determining officially
them were[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (451)[...]after "First: That the supreme court had no juris•
the election, as required by law, it was found diction to issue a writ of mandamus; no origi.
that by mistake, or otherwise, the[...]ority of the ballots· cast at citizens, had no right or capacity to invoke the
the elect[...]"Third: That no demand had been made
"The people remem[...]e abstracts, for upon the facts there was no room for
c,·cn though the abstracts, by means pf mis- doubt, and if the court had no j uris<liction, or
take, fraud or otherwise, were known to be the rclators no right, that was tht end of the
false, and[...]assing bo-,.rd possessed · proceeding~.
no power whaten?r, after the expiration of the[...]and capacity to petition for the writ; that no
A History of Montana Volume 1 (452)[...]removal ~loses ]. Liddell, from April 2, 1888, to No-
of the seat of government, rendered a decree vem[...]cis G. Servis. Judge uary 7, 1895 ; \l\lilliam H. De\,\/itt, from No-
Servis resigned and returned to Ohio, where vemb[...]The act of congress of July 26th, 1866, de-
justices of the territorial supreme court[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (453)[...], who was appointed by President
riing there were no precedents to guide the Cle,·eland April[...]oon after i\•Iontana became a state Judge De\Volfe was the third citizen of the
in 1889[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (454)[...]into law. The legislature, unfortu-
bers who had no other duties than those of nately[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (455)[...]years of English and ishable capitally. Order was no better main-
American history did not[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (456)[...]ing law; and I confess that I some- visions, no doubt he is consistent in opposing
what approved[...]ief of the Bar Association as they were out no glossary or commentary can make it more
of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (457)[...]terminology sought t~> graft upon this ' who have no axes to grind, who do not wish to
body ol law t[...]to wealth
and those also enacted in 18<;5~ it is no wonder or power at the expense of others,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (458)[...]as now prevail in knows all the Jaw, but there is no person, how~
equity ; and that this be done at[...]onder-
April 5th, 1894, Ex-Chief Justice \-Vade de- ous ,·olumes, and not having the nece.Ssary
l[...]compelled to study sons, by technicalities, or by no reasons at
and learn the law before they know i[...]eorie,s ; broad
dictory and uncertain. There is no person in and learned decisions, and narro[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (459)[...]have, by
They spend their lives in searching for de- the decisions of the courts, become fixed[...]even, which was more serious, on there is no public record of much that was
all articles of fo[...]re- N. Blake, chief justice ; \Villiam I-I. De\.Vitt,
finement of despotism and cruelty,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (460)[...]ville Academy. For si>: winters, It is no disparagem~nt to the other great law-
co[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (461)[...]to his successor Theodore Brantley. Judge
of the de<:isions of that court. He prepared Pembert[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (462)[...]besides Giddings. lish and American jurisprudence no judge
who was appointed and confirmed but nev[...]t would be and few who ·equalled him in ability. No
remarkable, indeed, if among h,·enty-nine me[...]y President years. During this time Judge Knowles de-
, Roose,·elt as district judge of the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (463)[...]een noticed in another can ascertain there is no man now residing
part of this chapter. In 191[...]ty
J udge Bourquin possesses; in a \'Cry high de- o f traders bound for the Flathead[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (464)[...]arter of
election until the fall of 188o, when he de- Montana unite at this time in telling of the
cli[...]Virgil's Aeneid arrh·ed in his wan- acteristics. No more courageous man ever
derings at the ancient c[...]n his early life he resolved that his
have been." No man who has ever Jived[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (465)[...]ity and virtue. Though he was poor erty had no greater friend and champion.
in money and proper[...]reasure that all the wealth of the Golcondas no greater nor 111ore valiant foe. This im-
could n[...]descnp-
passions and prejudices of the people; he de- tion nor a full-and therefore not a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (466)[...]rn his loss." ciples of e<1uity. He had no patience with
By many of the lawyers and jud[...]orking for the , ~tterment of the known no kinder man. I ha\'C seldom seen
condition of so[...]to do with the making of the his• haps no other state in the world is blessed
tory[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (467)[...]pie, when the purpose of the war had been
no longer delay. In such a frame of mind it ·[...]ment presented its ultimatum to Spain de-
to precipitate war.[...]mediately the Acct ,-0111-
public mind it needed no further proof that prising the K[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (468)[...]pain ; and it is scarcely an ex• Don Antonio de Ulloa; the Don Juan de Aus-
iggcration to say that beiore the first day of tria; the Isla de Cuba; the Isla de Luzon ;
l\fay 1898, cornparati,·cly few Amer[...]ands belonged Elcano; the Velasco; the Isla de i\lindanao
to Sr>ain. Indeed, few kncw[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (469)[...]ation of three regiments .of
these reasons he had no place to go, no alter- cavalry was a uthorized to be compo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (470)[...]Infantry,
cause of the method adopted by the war de• U. S. V.
paruucnt of aUotti[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (471)[...]s. This reputation carries with
General Orders No. 63, it a responsibility[...]GRICSOY,
not gel a chance to get to the front-are de- Colo11el Comma11di11g Third U. S. Vo/rmtccr
sen· i[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (472)[...]listed men. \Villiam the t:. S. T. S., Rio de Janeiro, July 24th and
£. Davies[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (473)[...]National
men was fortunate, for it sustained no serious Guard of l\•lontana, had been orga[...]ing cable between Ilo llo well equipped to de,·elop speedily into excel-
and Cebu d[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (474)[...]s, as
who, at the outbreak of the war was on de- a member of Company B said, "a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (475)[...]quately fed. were transferred to the Rio de Janeiro and
But with.almost incredible dispatch o[...]vania,'1 accompanied by the transport 0 Rio de
sent it forth for the honor and glory o f the[...]m., the vessel weighed anchor and lowing on No,·cmber 21st. Regirnental head-
started on its jo[...]ncluding 3rd Battalions were housed at No. 6 San
the ship's officers and crew there[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (476)[...]ance in the face of continued
General Orders No. 22, of October 14, 1898. insults was as[...]can territory. During the night
of blockhouse Node- ernor in ihc Philip1>ines, sa[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (477)[...]ollowing are furnished:
sentric.s brought no hostile response, except
the killing; by[...]\'Cry quiet and
Americano was the the.me. No one seemed people are again app~ring on the stree[...]determination but the s.c cmingly confident that no immediate dis-
Tagalo. J\11 Others[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (478)[...]is considering the matter whether it would No exc111ng developments this morning.[...]Concord. -I said last night that there was no troops, sending them down the Bay. \Ve have[...]to keep the vessel
gin it. They are no longer amenable to reason; in the harbor.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (479)[...]can do so successfully, before whose troops no.rth of the Pasig have expe-
the regular re[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (480)[...]t it could
from Malolos that he would explain his de- not control its people beyond a c[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (481)[...]1
~1.ALOtos, CAPlTAt. o•~ F1ui>1No Ris:ruouc, EvACUATEo AND Acv1NAL00 s[...]arrested in San Juan de! 1{onte taking photog-
i\[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (482)[...]nts' attack the troops report: " I ha,·e no doubt when Colonel Kess-
remaining in barracks w[...]"which I have sent to the front, we will de-
11nder the immediate command of 1'1:ajor[...]in combatting the enemy, and thrown up. No further advance was made
early on the morn[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (483)[...]sted to
homes in distant ,,illages. There was no lack remain as quiet as possible for a couple[...]align-
early as February 8th, became bold and de- ment, which he accomplished on the aftern[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (484)[...]ment for a concealed advance, in the hope of de-
played a conspicuous part. At about 3 o'clock[...]onet charge, if necessary, to
occupy blockhouse No. 2. Company C was at reach its de[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (485)[...]Died Mar. 13. 1900,
endurance seemed to know no bounds. On July 10,
iSs>!), he was commiMi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (486)[...]new the attack and quickly passing
Francisco de! ~'1onte ·and Bagbag, and Otis's[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (487)[...]ned to natives
ha,·e committ~d upon us. l·lavc no compassion who had al,ways pro,•ed[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (488)[...]anks.
eight miles was covered in this ad,,ance. No Company G. Private Robert Brown, ( died[...]ith Companies M, E, G and D was to the left no longer deploying as skirmishers but in col[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (489)[...]ce Keenan.
burning nipa huts and bamboo thickets. No The only evei1t of importance on this[...]e com-
the insurgents and driving them northward, de- mand of Colonel \Vall;tce, as support[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (490)[...]gents had con- north bank of the river Rio Grande de la Pam-
structed an intrkate system of s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (491)[...]in or ~fay 4th the pursuit of the broken and de-
their entrenchments. By noon the fire of[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (492)[...]holding San Fernando. At dawn a cossack
found no signs of the Filipino forces. On[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (493)[...]of the men of this· such men display no vital resistance to acute
brigade, in c[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (494)[...]Upon his return to St. Louis, Colter de-
torians believe that he induced a[...]fort ·where Lisa was waiting. This was no been natural phenomena in thi[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (495)[...]Potts
of reproduction and the ~lements of rapid de- was killed. Colter made his escape[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (496)[...]gin trails, the discoverer of Yellowstone
so many de,•ils.' They were frequently on Park we[...]cknowledged him to be an explorer who had
hearing no more of the Indians, he dived performed[...]tendent of the park, discovered in 188o, the
no means of. killing game, although he saw i[...]at inscrip-
man but an American hunter would have de- tion deep into the tree will nev[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (497)[...]about hell and the day of doom. vVith that
No incidents nor alanns varied the horrible[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (498)[...]wing down the Upper Yellow- Father De Smet, under date of 1852, writes
stone-Elk- river[...]of Pcmboukkalesi, in Asia l\iinor, so well de-
upper i\•Jadison river astonished all t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (499)[...]rs and
The "Captai~1" Bridger, to whom Father De in the feverish and frenzied "pros~ctin[...]led by vValter \V. De Lacy. In September,[...]he trict now within the park. Although De Lacy
had seen them, he added such embellishment[...]to scarcely paused to view the geysers. De Lacy
fool the " tenderfoot." T he most daring f[...]ess occasionally told the tn1th the park but like De Lacy they were bent on
and there is no question as to his perfsct· oth~r discoveries th[...]dctachmei;its, traveling over different rou~es de- ever dispel the tales concerning it. In Sep-
A History of Montana Volume 1 (500)[...]ehold it."
publican and then, as there was no prospect "Viedncsday, 31. All wen[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (501)[...]ges gives the following account of Ev-
feet lower-no such regular ridges of foam as trts's disa[...]-Everts strayed off- my_steed rolled down
with no mortal in sight. l\1y heart gives thanks[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (502)[...]and crashed off tressed with anxiety, I was in no humor fQr
an1ong the pines. Everts never saw him[...]derness. Hunger assailed him, the savage do rne no personal harm, and, with the promise
howls of wo[...]fear at my presence among reka! I had found food. No optical illusion
A History of Montana Volume 1 (503)[...]and pausing, and all the while filling the for-
no mistaking that fearful voice. I had been[...]was over, and I should rise no more, The
"Pailing to alann. the animal, which[...]with the belief that I should make no more
side of the tree I speedily changed[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (504)[...]get it
more I could effect my deliverance; and I de- made a national park, little dreaming that
rived no little satisfaction from the thought such[...]s companions of the expedition had searched tion, no person can divide with.Messrs. Hedges
lo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (505)[...], I saw an Indian with an im-
might go. They lost no time in obeying him. mense navy pis[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (506)[...]f squaws about the fire were get-
to follow him. No other attempt was made on ting supper. My[...]my lap. I glanced at the chief and saw the
no further harm should befall us. It seemed[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (507)[...]Frank was told to remain at the camp I said. 'No.' he repl~d. 'something tells me
for the present,[...]. Such a. forlorn looking child I Night, All Day, No Sleep" allding that they
trust I may never again[...]ph's band.
it, and preparations were made for our de- The Indians went peaceably on the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (508)[...]was getting iny gun up ready to fire, but Oh no! I could do without a hat very well at
on[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (509)[...]her. men. He was distressed with anxiety,and de-
He rode her aboi1t one mile, but his wound[...]g but
lying in the water so long had done him no no one offered to accompany him on the des-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (510)[...]warden in charge te11s with pride of how the
de))osit built up by the action of the water[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (511)[...]at that bridges were swept away; a river's course
no great distance from it are Twin lakes, two[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (512)[...]tions called "biscuits"
the height· of their de,·clopment. appear, markin[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (513)[...]cano which wrought havoc in days gone by,
Father De Smet in his life and letters de- but these things arc secondary to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (514)[...]elk, 300 mountain
blasted by a great upheaval. So no matter sheep and 65 buffalo in the par[...]athetic and serious. Protec\ed· from the
to have no fear of man, but they arc keenly[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (515)[...]all sides and ne,•er a ·hint of the mighty de-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (516)[...]? 1ions, leaving .the hard basalt and firmer de-
\Vhat power laid on that crimson heart's[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (517)[...]try been plcx. entity we name the public,- had dn no-
known outside of the Indians, whose ancient tio[...]he q1acier · Nat ional Park. This tract has
had, no knowledge of the expedition of Sir its nor[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (518)[...]caged waters of St. ~Iary's. There is no scene more
creature of the wild, its pent-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (519)[...]fishing is permitted.
In no portion of this country are the wild
f[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (520)[...]nce From days so remote that we have no record
more, in 1909, the most expert horsemans[...]a great delicacy, and their hides
its kind, at no distant day a band rivalling that which[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (521)[...]on and under the .care of those who wrought the de-
unevenness of the country make it impos[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (522)[...]ic, industrious and willing to work,
There is no authority at the present time for bill under 1>[...]not they will benefit by the opening
and there is no present · plan for its open ing. of th[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (523)[...]able such a disposition a previous chapter. No one factor can have
of it may prove disast rous.[...]t- tion. The plumed hunter of the plains is no
tle coveted :sections. T herefore, in dealing[...]sider that. gen- the young man who say yes or no/' and the
erally speaking, the reservation[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (524)[...]which will come as surely as the sun rises in
is no exception; he is entirel)·, intensely human, t[...]an will blaze his own trail,
like the rest of us. No race in bondage ever solve his own[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (525)[...]11sive mining operations are
that part of what is no,,• Montana that lies carried on. The following[...]in- gi\'eS evidenc-c of so~1c e.xtCnsive mineral de-
cluding what was afterwards Deer Lodge, p[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (526)[...]ome time did not seem to favor it. He ga\'e no rea-
point on the Big Hole river or on \Varm[...]ved, and with them came a request from the
time no one in Butte fully realized the magni-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (527)[...]per
considerable delay in building, and fire de• cent of all the copper produced in the[...]alled
The buildings were of iron and many new de- years ago to make a refractory[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (528)[...]after a short time during which period no reg- fonn a characteri stic feature of the[...]conda's smel- -2, 100 feet above sea le,,el. This, of course,

ters have al[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (529)[...]. . • . . . . . . .70
concluded that it was no good for farming. Octobe[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (530)[...]few years, the people of that There seems no reason to doubt that in the
section are ju[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (531)[...]rous
Presbyterian church buildings, and other de- mining camps exist. Silver Star,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (532)[...]ke mangels and
a great deal of moisture. There is no reason sugar beets, may be profitably raise[...]feeding crops may be raised, there is no r~ason
vVhile the growing season in ·[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (533)[...]lvlontana has been largely centered on the de- direct business relations with Helena. It[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (534)[...]ophet, said of this fair, in a speech you cannot- no matter in what direction-you
deli,·ered a[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (535)[...]e excellence of these ductive ·section. Belgr~de is a thriving town
crops.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (536)[...]getables are grown. The soil is ,,cry fertile.
no country are the varied phases of scenery[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (537)[...]bushels round houses and shops and the operating de
of carrots averaging five pounds each, one par[...]strict be found. The unreserved and unappropri•
No. 24 shows how rapidly the country is grow-[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (538)[...]ars ago last June 2,300 feet above sea le\'el; se~ere storms arc
( 1899) that Custer fell at[...]on, by their ancient tana, and perhaps no county in the U nited
enemy, of the grea[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (539)[...]ecided growth
country is developing rapidly, and no section[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (540)[...]CIT\ ', ).Io~·r.,~.,. c.,Pl'r.\C, Su~PtUS ,\NO PROJ•'I TS,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (541)[...]e entire group of the other
gardens, but the area de,·oted 10 forming is original mines. and situated. This theory has
small and no considerable increase in the quan- been exploded[...]ere $32,930,553 in 1908, and $36,705,- mines show no indication ' of exhaustion.
161 in 1911, a[...]Hin the beginning of the year 1912, produc-
In no mining district is labor belier paid. T he[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (542)[...]tions.
"There is no doubt that Butte is the greatest It is[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (543)[...]hich crosses it from the western to the east-
No other city in the world of like population[...]to make mountains form a natural barrier against de-
5,485 trains of 35 cars each; for eve[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (544)[...]the tory, and its establishment has caused a de-
former being from 3 to 5 tons, and of t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (545)[...]in on the same basis." · No. t hard spring wheat.
The altitude of t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (546)[...]ANA

state, the autumns are probably the most de- Alfalfa is one of the important[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (547)[...]MONTANA

tains some enormous ore deposits. The de- Yellowstone National Park. It is[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (548)[...]on of all
point for a great, fertile, and rapidly de,•elop- property_ was $18,144,963 in 19[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (549)[...]quently competition being eliminated, and de-
The manufacturers of apple boxes s[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (550)[...]rom eleven
great size _it has a variety of altit11de, soil and acres. Another yield of ninety bushel[...]t and in the bushels an acre. There is no record of heavier
southern part of the cou[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (551)[...]eet Grass, entrance of the Glacier National Park. No
thence into Canada. The Northwestern Trust[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (552)[...]or a b!em-
summers and autumns are temperate and de- i~h in a ·hundred thousand boxes, they are the
lightful. The average temperature is 46 de- most remarkable on earth," has been sa[...]fit yielded the orchards of the Bit-
great that no one can afford to raise grain on te[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (553)[...]s south of Hamilton, is located
of butter and no clieese. · This. should not be[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (554)[...]and
all but 1,357 acres being unsurveyed and de- Hell Gate river contain many acres of[...]There are no bottom lands in Granite county
and str[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (555)[...]rict~ Drummond, on islature House Bill No. 9, having for its pur-
the main line of t[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (556)[...]as first kept, amounts
terious old stockade, no one knowing when nor to r 15.8 inch[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (557)[...]runs high per measured bushel. This is gen- that no wind prevailed, the town would have[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (558)[...]' 769

corn and vegetables. In no county in 1\.1:ontana The advance in th[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (559)[...]eral gold and copper properties have been de-
towns. l\1uch · live stock is shipped from[...]odge val- August, which is the month of little or no
A History of Montana Volume 1 (560)[...]pioneers who wer,e eastern people, it was de-
number of fanns and the population in the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (561)[...]for Col. Wilbur;
waukee & St. Paul Railroad is no,v building F. Sanders, was created in 1906[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (562)[...]s Fork river and the numerotis admiration. No county exceeded 'it i,i variety
other[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (563)[...]on the reservation that have been mad,e and much de,•elopment work
has grown up around the[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (564)[...]a, 2,113 resources of which are in the infancy of de-
at Jennings, 2,055, at Libby and ~,881 at[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (565)[...]Cheap coal or electric power is available for
no ·one ever attempted to get title to. prop[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (566)[...]steadily
Lavina was one of the several towns de- both in the numbef of inhabitants and in[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (567)[...]dant water and worthless lands once· scorned are no,\i
could readily be procured. vVhile oth[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (568)[...]rap)_dly; ne~rly 901ibling . during · the first de'- 1870 20,595 ' . •' . .. . . .. ..
ta'de from i870 to 188o ;· in'creasing more than . •[...]ingly. ..
ard one-half t_illl.e~ duri,ig the last de~ade from[...]•'
l A minus sign (-} dcf!otes de<::rC3sc.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (569)[...]decreased rapidly during the next two de-
buildings, and of $40,369,000 in the value[...]ID<:IC~C

1910 ......... $347,828,no $251,62~930[...]currency values reported.
i No data prior to 1870.

The total wea[...]

A History of Montana Volume 1 (570)[...]ngs give
decade from 1900 to 1910 as during the de- a high average number of[...]d on "all farms" in state. • No dala prior to 1870.
2 lncludc-s Crow Indian[...]coal,
tion) in 1900 to 516.7 acres in 1910. This de- $53,687,575.
crease[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (571)[...]ber of states to secure a po(tion of the de-
Increase, 77.2 per cent.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (572)[...]desir-
"I inforn1ed him of the fact that I had no able for this territory. I believe it will[...]ue. If we desire any of this popu-
there would be no meeting of the legislature lation[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (573)[...]arentage was
mend that a small appropriation be m~de for 38.2. .
the purpose indic[...]26 in the urban population and 23.5 in the
no matter from what country they may come.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (574)[...]gration has come, there arc no reliable statis-
For all classes co[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (575)[...]wing l\Iontana's development we horses arc no more. On the contrary, the
find that it has proce[...]passed and very slowly and • ~t takes no prophet to see that the ?.•lon-
graduall[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (576)[...]Held at the city of Virginia, the capital, No-
ison county.[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (577)[...]\Vilson, Jefferson coun- house.
ty ; El izur Beach, James Fergus, \Vilbur F.[...]Richard T. Kennon and Annis- Stephen De\Volfc, Christian B. I·Iouser, Rob-
lead H[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (578)[...]he Kennedy, i\1issoula county; Stephen De\Volfe,
council; Alexander E .. ?llay[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (579)[...]Stephen De \Volle, Jan. 28, 1888; Nov. 8,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (580)[...]is Rorwitt,
Thonias H. Carter, :\Jar. 4, 188!); No,·. 8, ~ecretary of state; John E.•[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (581)[...], \~1illiam K. Flowerree,
• Alexander i\<fet7.el, l\1adison county; N. E. Teton county.
A History of Montana Volume 1 (582)[...]oteau county; ham, D., Granite county; Sam~el Hurd Glid-
George ,v. Burt and Henry N. Sy[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (583)[...]uary 6, 1913, to January, \Villiam· H. De \'Vitt, November 8, 1889, to
1917.[...]Horace R. Buck, January 4, 1897, to De-
Eugene A. Steere, January 2, 1893, to[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (584)[...]-
John \Vraith, clerk, Butte, llfont.; Robert El- ence S., dentist; Lewis, George V., cowbo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (585)[...]y, Ekal-
Young, cowboy, Kirby, :Mont. ; Cornelius El• aka, ~•f ont.; Jenks, Eland,[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (586)[...], kcr, Butte, Mont., soldier, to Reg. baud, No
l\font.; Frank E. Tate, cabinet mak[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (587)[...]orer, to Company L, September 14, 1898;
by order, De~cmber 15, 1898; Henry Miller, Jo[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (588)[...]by order, July 15, 1898;
Barney Hogan, miner, El Paso, \Vis.; Frank Austin D. Butler, Helen[...]
A History of Montana Volume 1 (589)[...]ncey \V, Jackson, Twin Bridges, i\iont., El.tis \V. \Vynne, Capt., accountant, Butte,
teams[...]\Valkerville, llfont.; Chas. J. Kinseth, tra,·el-
thigh, near Bacolor, P. I., June 10, 18[...]

Sanders, Helen Fitzgerald, 1883-, A History of Montana Volume 1 (1913). Montana History Portal, accessed 19/02/2025, https://www.mtmemory.org/nodes/view/5083

A History of Montana Volume 1 (2025)
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