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November 8, 2019
Ghost Towns and History
of Montana Newsletter
B a r k e r & H u g h e s v i l l e , M o n t a n a
From the Melstone Messenger
Newspaper
Nov. 21, 1929
These two
camps located
along
Galena
Creek in
the Little
Belt Mountains
once
held as many as 500 people. Two men who discovered silver in the area
each had camps named after them; E.A. "Buck" Barker and Patrick Hughes.
Numerous mines were producing when the railroad expanded a branch
line to Barker. But, both towns would take a near fatal hit from the Silver
Panic of 1893. Mining would continue sporadically for several years. The
Block P Mine was worked until 1943 and considered Montana's greatest
lead mine after
1929. A couple of
residents still remain
among the
scattered remnants
of the
past...
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Vananda, Montana got its start in the early 1900s as
a stop on the Milwaukee Railroad. The town boasted
300 people by
1910. The arid
terrain and
drought conditions
of the
1920s made it
difficult to successfully
farm. As people moved on, the town would begin
to dwindle. The bank closed in 1923 while the post office
held on until 1959. The railroad through the area was abandoned in 1980.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Broadway, a gold-bearing
vein located in the Silver Star
District, was discovered in the
late 1860s. By 1881 the mine
had produced half a million
dollars while mining down
less than 200 feet. The Broadway
Gold Mining Company,
Ltd. of London bought the
property and built a forty
stamp mill on the banks of the
Jefferson River. A two mile tramway delivered the ore to the mill from the mine. This extraction
process would prove to be a failure and the mill shut down. The mine would open up again under
the watchful eye of one of its original owners, F.R. Merk. During its run the mine was credited
with production of over a million dollars.
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The Ekalaka Eagle, Nov. 21, 1913
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׉EG h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y
P a g e 3
Victory Mining Camp
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Victory mine, located two miles above Ophir on the
west side of Ophir Creek, was discovered in 1900 and
developed beginning in 1906. The mine was active until
1912 when work was halted due to excessive ground
water. The
gold-silver ore, quartz with pyrite and chalcopyrite, was
valued as high as $40 to $100 per ton. Some of the ore
was shipped, but some was worked at the mill at the site.
The waste dump of the mine and the mill tailings were
later reworked using the cyanide process. All told, the
mine is reported to have produced $40,000 by 1912.
Garnet, Montana- Tragedy marked the
early years of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Adams in one of
Garnet's more comfortable family homes built in
the late
1800s.
First, a
newborn
son died
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
in a Missoula hospital. Mrs. Adams then delivered
a baby girl at home in 1909 and saved
her from a living room fire a few months later,
only to lose her to illness at the age of 3. In
an era before antibiotics and the polio vaccine,
many children died. Mary Jane, born in 1917,
lived here until 1927 when her family moved
to Missoula. Mary Jane's memories of Garnet
have helped to bring this ghost town alive for
everyone who visits today.
- Courtesy of Garnet Ghost Town.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Please be sure to share this newsletter with a friend!
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y
The Pantry Shelf
PORK ROAST WITH SWEET POTATOES
Score in squares a 6 -pound pork
roast, baste frequently until nearly
done. Then place sweet potatoes
around the roast. The potatoes should
be boiled until nearly done before
placing in the roasting pan. Sprinkle
over them a small handful of brown
sugar and salt to taste. Brown nicely
and baste frequently while cooking.
Mrs. Nina Black, Jefferson Island.
HEALTH SALAD
Dissolve a package of lemon jello in 1
cup boiling water and add 1 cup of
juice from a can of crushed pineapple.
Then add 1 cup crushed pineapple, 1
cup raw grated carrot, 1 teaspoon
salt, 1 teaspoon vinegar. Mold and
serve on lettuce with salad dressing.
Mrs. Cleve Hotz, Malta.
CRANBERRY SHERBET
1 pint cranberries 2 cups sugar 1 teaspoon
gelatin 4 cups water 2 egg
whites 1 teaspoon lemon juice Cook
cranberries in 2 cups water, put
through sieve, add sugar while hot,
then gelatin which has been dissolved
in a cup water, then put in the rest of
the water. Let freeze until mushy.
Beat the whites of eggs and beat up
together; then freeze again. Mrs. C. B.
Bull, Wolf Point.
- The Sanders County Independent Newspaper
(Thompson Falls), April 30, 1941
Accessed at: montananewspapers.org
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Elliston
mining district is
about 20 miles
west of Helena and
south of the Little
Blackfoot River. It
includes the town
of Elliston which is
the first town on the Northern Pacific Railroad west of the Continental
Divide. The mining district includes the town of Elliston but is
generally south of the river in mountainous, heavily-forested terrain.
Early reports on the district described about 15 productive mines,
most of which were from five to 11 miles south of the town.
The Elliston district began as a placer operation along the Little
Blackfoot River during the 1860s, but the gold deposits were poor
and little production occurred. It was not until the 1890s, when lode
mining was developed south of town, that the district began to produce
significant
amounts of ore.
Most of the production
from the
lode mining occurred
between
1890 and 1908,
at which point
the total production
was estimated at $2,750,000.
Other important industries of the district included woodcutting and
mining limestone. - Montana DEQ
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Madisonian, Jan. 1, 1886
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