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9ׁH #https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ׁׁЈ׈EaZq2pXJ׉EAUGUST 2021
Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
From the new North-west (Deer Lodge)
Oct. 26, 1877
A N E W M I N I N G T O W N - J u n e 4 ,
1895
COLOMA, Near the Head of Camas Prairie, Rapidly Growing.
It is a young camp but the surrounding mines and country promise for it
a prosperous future
and steady growth.
But few of the Standard’s
readers know
that there is such a
town as Coloma on
the map of Montana,
and not many of those
who know of its existence can tell its location or anything regarding it.
Six months ago there was no such town, but now it is a delightful and
thriving community, with the promise of a successful and prosperous
future before it. It is small, but it is busy, and business is what makes a
town. When the success of the Mammoth mine became assured, those
who are interested in the property began to make arrangements for the
accommodation of their employees, and thus the town of Coloma was
established. Its existence
has been a
brief one, but it
promises to become
well known as the
location of one of
the best mining
properties in the
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
state. – The Anaconda Standard Newspaper, accessed via https://
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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Kendall, Montana- General Store
G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
Thomas R. Matlock was a progressive, independent merchant with unlimited faith in the gold
deposits of the North Moccasins. He bought a lot in
Kendall early in 1902 while still operating a boarding
house in Whiskey Gulch near Gilt Edge.
The cornerstone for the Matlock General Store was
placed in April 1902, and business opened in August
of that year offering staples and “fancy” groceries, dry
goods, notions and “gent’s furnishings”- all at Lewistown
prices.
T.R. Matlock General Merchandise Store, date
unknown, Courtesy of Lewistown Public Library
and www.mtmemory.org
When the gold gave out in 1911 and most businesses
left, Matlock hung on until 1912 before building a new
store in Hilger and closing shop in Kendall. He then ran a weekly delivery wagon from his store
in Hilger to serve the few remaining Kendall residents.
Matlock always believed that the gold mines at
Kendall would revive and never dismantled his
Kendall store. He was right. In the 1980s and
90s, the renewed mining at Kendall by Canyon
Resources Corporation extracted over
300,000 ounces of gold; but by then Matlock’s
store had crumbled into ruin and Matlock was
long since gone. -Interpretive Sign, Kendall
Townsite
Current Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Sourdough Schoolhouse was built in 1912 on the David Nevin property in what
became known as School District 43.
In the school year 1951-1952 the
teacher, Evelyn Larson Willson,
taught at the school. Since a teacherage,
a house or accommodations for
the teacher to live, wasn’t available
she lived in the one room schoolhouse.
She partitioned part of the one
room schoolhouse off with a blanket
to serve as her bedroom at night.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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׉EcP a g e 3
G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
MacFarland or Pineau Placer
Also known as the Pineau Placer, the MacFarland
placer is one of the largest producers in the Gold
Creek district as well as being the best documented.
The placer was located on the upper middle
fork of Gold Creek around 1870, but development
of the placer did not occur until 1896.
Gus Pineau, Eugeen McFarland and Green Dudley
discovered the Friday placer mine in 1895. Shortly
thereafter McFarland and Pineau, along with two
new partners, began mining the other nearby
claims. McFarland is credited with the camp associated
with the placer.
The camp is credited with $35,000 in gold dust and
nuggets between 1896 and 1913. The gold was
coarse, about the size of No. 8 buckshot. It has
yielded large nuggets, typically 10 ounces, but the
largest weighed in at 27 ounces. The gold is valued
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
at $16 to $17 per ounce while the gravel was said to carry about 40 cents gold per yard. – Courtesy
of: https://deq.mt.gov/
The history of Danielsville starts way back at the turn of the
20th century when an old Frenchman made a discovery of gold
outcroppings in the district. The Kendall Chronicle reported that
“The country was hard to get into. On one of the highest peaks,
the hardy old man worked away. He found plenty of float and
finally found a vein.” He would later lead a party of local men to
his discovery but, as the snow started to fall and the cold, miserable
weather set in, even
the old man became disoriented as to the treasure’s location. Everyone
gave up the search but the determined old Frenchman went
on alone. His body would be found high in the mountains the following
spring. In 1901, the three Daniels brothers along with Frank
Jones and Dick LaCerse would rediscover the lode. The news
reached Deer Lodge and prospectors arrived for the loot. The
townsite of Danielsville was born in 1902 and soon included a genPhoto
by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
eral store, saloon, hotel and blacksmith shop, among several miners’ cabins.
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P a g e 4
G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
A LOOK BACK ON PIONEER
Main St. in Pioneer, Courtesy of the Great Falls Tribune
MAY 11, 1935- OLD WEST STILL LIVES IN TOWN
OF PIONEER, MONTANA
Pioneer, the quaintest little town in Montana, and
tucked snugly at the feet of the newly-made mountains
of rock dredged from 50-foot depths in the
bottom of Gold creek, holds to her ancient spirit of
pioneer days; holds to her quaint atmosphere of the
old West and to her pristine state of hospitality, her
primitive buildings and her venerable lure for gold.
Protected at her back by a panorama of a mountain
range and at the front by rolling foothills and on either side by piles upon piles of rock, she rests snugly
in the cradle of her birth. On the inner walls of the old stone buildings may be seen the names of old pioneers
carelessly scrawled there with their dates going back to nearly three quarters of a century ago.
Many old prospectors still roam "them thar hills'' for gold with their burro, brawn, beans and bacon for
subsistence while they pick hundreds of tiny holes in the mountain side in search of that precious metal.
But more than that, "for there's gold in that thar crick", the Pioneer Placer Dredging company in November,
1933, installed a gold dredge that weighs more than 1,500 tons and takes 7,000 cubic yards of rock
and dirt from the bottom of Gold creek every 24 hours.
A long line of heavy steel buckets of nine cubic feet capacity,
and each bucket weighing almost a ton, continually
swoop to the bottom of the river and fill themselves with
rock, sand and gold, and without pause carry their burden
up a ladder weighing more than 100 tons, to a hopper
where they dump their load of rock, sand and gravel.
From the hopper a big distributor takes the cargo and
sends the dirt and gravel to the sluice boxes where water
takes the small pebbles and the dirt rolling and rippling
down the boxes and the gold is picked up by quicksilver
and carried by gravity to the bottom. A big revolving screen separates the finer pebbles and dirt from
the big rock. The smaller rocks are taken on a rubber carrier up the 100-foot stacker to the top of the
great piles of rock on the bank and the heavy rocks are deposited back in the bottom of the river. The
dirt and sand, after being robbed of the gold, is taken on carriers to a distance of about 25 feet from the
spud, or big steel post at the back of the dredge which serves as an anchor for the dredge to swing from,
An old landmark in Pioneer, Courtesy of the Great
Falls Tribune
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
and again the river receives part of that which was taken from her bed.
Power is brought from a high tension line on a
cable enclosed in rubber, and is carried under
the water until it emerges to come into four
transformers on the dredge, where it is transformed
down to 4.400 volts. This power feeds
nine motors, one of 200 horsepower capacity
and the others ranging from 15 to 35 horsepower.
Photo
by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
A huge winch raises and lowers the bucket line and swings the dredge around to the position the operator
desires. All movements of the dredge are controlled by winches, and the winch room, or control
room, with all the levers looks at first glance like an overgrown asparagus patch.
There are mammoth gears measuring 45 feet in circumference,
a bucket line and ladder weighing more than 100 tons
each, upper and lower tumblers, and enormous revolving
screen, dump chutes, conveyor, the various winches, four
transformers, nine motors, the big spud made by riveting
gigantic steel beams together, main gearing, bucket idler,
gold tables and the big boat with a nine-foot hull. The boat
measures 250 feet in length by 50 feet in width and about
40 feet above
the nine-foot hull. Seven feet of the bull is under water.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
So it is, that the restful little town of Pioneer, Montana,
holding sacredly and religiously to her pioneer spirit, is
still pioneering, but in a big way in her search for gold and
the Old West still lives. With the protection of the great
hills of rock piled in her front yard, no other town can be
built upon Pioneer and steal the glory of the Old West.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
And in another three-quarters of a century when the pioneers of today have written their names upon
the walls of the old rock buildings and have gone to mingle with their ancestors, the little town of Pioneer
will not have been robbed of the glory, and the Old West shall still live. -Montana Oil and Mining
Journal, Accessed via: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
Garnet, Montana- Frank Davey owned and operated Davey’s General
Store (built in 1898) and the Garnet Stage line, owned a hotel, a mining
claim, and a blacksmith shop. Frank always wore a buffalo robe when
he drove the stage and was known to have an ample supply of buffalo
robes available to keep the women passengers warm on their ascent into
the Garnet range. Frank passed
away in 1947 while walking to one of
his mining claims. By 1948 the majority
of his leftover store merchandise,
personal belongings, and mining
claims were auctioned. His Garnet
Lode claim, which consisted of most of
the land where the town had been
built, was donated
to the
United States
Government by
Davey’s heirs.
Some of
Davey's Prices:
eggs sold for 30
cents a dozen,
coffee for 25
Davey’s Stagecoach, Courtesy of www.blm.gov
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
cents a can, butter for 30 cents a pound, and shaving soap was a dime.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Butcher Hank Crawford, Bannack's first sheriff,
was living in a cabin along bachelor's row
when he heard the news that
Henry Plummer was "looking"
for him. He was ready and
shot Plummer in his right
arm but Plummer would regain
his shooting prowess
and chase Crawford out of
town. Plummer went on to
become sheriff.
Henry Plummer
“There was a close contest for sheriff. Jeff Durley of Jimmy’s Bar, ran against Plummer and Plummer was elected sheriff by
three majority, and a large number of miners, living down the gulch, regretted Plummer’s election, which was due to their staying
away from the polls.” - The Dillon Tribune, April 20, 1888, Accessed via: www.montananewspapers.org
Frank Davey, Courtesy of www.blm.gov
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
Pete Zortman Comes Home
Oliver Peter Zortman came west in 1888, lured by
gold discovered in eastern Montana’s Little Rocky
Mountains. He struck it rich several times, ran a cyanide
mill, and left his name on the town of Zortman.
He was part of an elite group—one of very few
to leave the Little Rockies with a small fortune in
gold.
He joined the Masons in Chinook and eventually
ended up in Big Timber where he died of cancer in
1933, penniless. No stone marked his final resting
place, but the local newspaper that documented his passing mentioned that he was buried in a
hand-dug pauper’s grave. A few years ago, Zortman residents decided to honor their namesake. It
was no small task to discover Zortman’s unmarked resting place. A long search led to Zortman’s
membership in the Masons. The leatherbound
records of the Big Timber Masonic
Lodge offered details of Zortman’s
funeral. With permission from Zortman’s
relatives, several veterinarians, a Chinook
undertaker, cemetery workers,
and assorted Zortman residents oversaw
the exhumation. The remains of
Pete Zortman surfaced from the chocolate
soil in Big Timber’s Mountain View
Cemetery with some difficulty. Water
from an irrigation ditch immediately
flooded the hole as the backhoe dug.
Three feet of muck was removed, and
pieces of the coffin and Zortman began
to surface. The yellowed bones were placed in a newly made pine coffin and loaded onto a truck.
On August 27, 2005, a vintage hearse carried the pine box to the Zortman Cemetery. A smattering
of relatives and most of the town of Zortman
attended the graveside services. Pete Zortman
was home.
–Ellen Baumler
Zortman, Montana, 1908. Montana Historical Society Photograph Archives, 951-885
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Ellen Baumler is an award-winning author and Montana historian.
A master at linking history with modern-day supernatural
events, Ellen's true stories have delighted audiences across the
state. She lives in Helena in a century-old house with her husband,
Mark, and its resident spirits. To view and purchase Ellen’s
books, visit: http://ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/p/my-books.html
Ad from the Enterprise (Harlem, MT), April 8, 1908, Accessed via: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
Keystone, Montana- Keystone was actually the third name for this mining town. It was
first called O'Rourke after miner Phillip O'Rourke who with the help of a couple friends found
veins of silver and lead in the
area in 1887. The name was
changed to Carter in 1890 to
honor Thomas Carter, a U.S.
Senator who helped to establish
a post office in the town.
The town boasted a few hundred
residents until the silver
crash of 1893 which hit the
town hard. The town saw a
comeback a few years later
and was known as Keystone,
named after a local mine. By
1925, silver prices fell again and the townspeople moved on.
The Hotel Vendome in Carter, Montana (later Keystone, Montana)
Excerpt from The Daily Miissoulian Newspaper,
October 1, 1914, Accessed via: https://
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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