׉?4ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://zYxX8McD71tGH9jKGE2pgaqLUJfp4M94jUGa0fhtHUg \`׉	 7cassandra://-NhnfJjuZ5pzcZSuJc1dvzy8QVGtIfXMZhIwWEH2gq4͐`s׉	 7cassandra://NljFZAuCJ4Y2ey3RgOp8E1fLIyr8cRO6CE6EyXQq6rs*` ׉	 7cassandra://vkRQu9suPvuIUU1Fih0k8HfQUt7_jDsIgQ46uwyLqrA vd͠]cyμ'ט   (u׈   frJ  נcyμ& ցf9׉H Zhttps://northwestrving.com/montana-s-ghost-town-loop-glendale-helca-lion-city-trapper-cityGׁׁrנcyμ- ^̽9ׁHhttps://northwestrving.comׁׁЈנcyμ, ̅	9ׁHhttps://montananewspapers.orgׁׁЈ׈Ecyμ׉ESEPTEMBER 2022
Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
From the Dillon Tribune June 5, 1891
Montana’s Ghost Town Loop– Canyon Creek, Vipond Park &
Quartz Hill
Accessed via: https://montananewspapers.org
Welcome to part four of Montana’s
Ghost Town Loop (article
links can be found at end of this
article) which brings us back to
our starting point and completes
the loop. This 70-mile loop tour
in southwest Montana passes
through scenic territory with
plenty of camping options while visiting ghost towns and mining camps that
helped establish the state. You will find it easy to social distance yourself
from others and world events as you enjoy this loop. If you missed the last
entry you can read it here. This week we will visit the very photogenic Canyon
Creek Charcoal Kilns, the ghosts of Vipond Park and the ghost town of
Quartz Hill.
Canyon Creek Charcoal Kilns
Furnaces in a smelting operation require large amounts of fuel to heat the
ore in order to release the precious metal trapped within. The choice of fuel
for the nearby Glendale smelter we visited in the last installment was charcoal.
Charcoal is produced by burning cord wood under controlled conditions.
In the early 1880's, twenty three brick kilns were constructed on Canyon
Creek, about five miles from the Glendale smelter, where timber was
abundant along with clay for making the bricks. These kilns employed scores
of men, both to operate and to harvest the huge amounts of wood to keep
them burning around the clock. A good wood cutter who could cut and deliver
two cords of wood per day was paid $8 - 10 for his efforts. As wood
was depleted in the immediate area around the kilns a wood chute was conCourtesy
of https://northwestrving.com
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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
Courtesy of https://northwestrving.com
structed up the steep hillside to the north to access the
large plateau area above known as Vipond Park. If you
look up the hillside from the kilns you can still spot the
remains of the platform used to load the wood into the
chute. The forest service has restored three of the kilns
to their original appearance and installed interpretive
signs. Click here to learn more about the kilns.
Vipond Park
Interpretive Signs Tell the Story of the Kilns
Vipond Park and the mining district that followed were named after
the Vipond brothers who settled in the area in 1868. In April of that year,
John Vipond filed the first mining claim in the area. His brothers soon
joined in prospecting the area and discovered what would become the
Gray Jockey mine the next year. During the ensuing years, the Gray Jockey
mine and mill yielded 22,789 ounces of silver from 2,161 tons of ore taken
from the mine. The remains of the Gray Jockey are one of the few mining
ruins visible from the Quartz Hill Road which you will be traveling between
Quartz Hill and the kilns.
Courtesy of https://northwestrving.com
It’s Been Years Since a Vipond Miner
Walked Through This Door
Other notable mining properties in the area that were discovered and
mined in the late 1800’s include:
• The Queen of the Hills
Mine, which employed about 50 men to develop a producing
gold mine and construct a 10-stamp mill at the
site. In the early 1900’s, the mine and mill traded hands,
more improvements were made, but little if any profitable
ore was mined. The area around the Queen of the
Hills contains the largest amount of ruins in the area.
• The Old Faithful Mine was probably the largest producer
in Vipond. It produced a total of 1,037 tons of
ore, yielding 69,512 pounds of lead, 6,700 pounds of zinc, 2,582 pounds of copper, 1,576 ounces of silver
and 268 ounces of gold. Judging by the newer ruins at the site, it looks like mining attempts occurred
here until the late 1960’s or early 1970’s. Tableware still sits on the counters and canned goods
are in the cupboards in one old cabin.
Courtesy of https://northwestrving.com
Structure at Queen of the Hills Mine
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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
· The Keystone Mine contains a couple of old cabins located
on a hill above several collapsed mine openings. I was
unable to find any historical production data on the mine,
but it appears it was mined in the 1880’s and again as late
as the 1930’s.
Courtesy of https://northwestrving.com
Ghost town books and websites will make reference to Vipond
as if a centralized town once existed. From my research
and visiting the area, Vipond was never a town, but
more of a settled area, so don’t expect to find a main street with abandoned buildings lining the sides.
What you will find are scattered ruins hidden off side roads in a very scenic forest setting.
With that said, those that desire to seek out the ghosts of Vipond Park should have a good map, GPS navigation,
good wayfinding skills along with an appropriate vehicle for traveling old mining roads.
Coordinates of the mines listed:
• Gray Jockey: N45° 41.648 W112° 56.000
• Queen of the Hills:
Multiple ruins below the mine: N45° 40.282 W112° 56.891
A large building with a nice view of Vipond Park: N45° 40.407 W112° 56.930 (Just north of here is an old
log cabin with trees growing within it)
Mine adit: N45° 40.332 W112° 57.137
Mine shafts: N45° 40.402 W112° 57.271
• Old Faithful Mine: N45° 41.536 W112° 56.835
• Keystone Mine
Cabin: N45° 42.465 W112° 56.177
Another cabin: N45° 42.420 W112°56.231
• Other ruins not mentioned above:
The remains of a cabin can be found at: N45° 40.555 W112° 54.809
• Remains of two more cabins can be found at: N45° 40.695 W112° 54.754
These were probably housing and/or related to the wood cutting operations.
Quartz Hill
Cabin Overlooking Vipond Park
This is an easily reached ghost town via Quartz Hill road with a handful of standing structures and a photogenic
mining head frame. Quartz Hill was featured in a previous post which you can view here.
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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
Getting There
You have a choice on approaching / visiting
all three sites as they are linked together
by through roads from the towns
of Wise River and Melrose with camping
options at both ends of the route. The
author chose to visit the charcoal kilns
and Vipond Park from the Melrose side
from his existing campsite near Glendale,
while visiting Quartz Hill via the very well
maintained gravel road from the Town of
Wise River. Those with suitable RVs like a 4x4 class B van or pop up truck camper mounted on a four wheel
drive truck might consider driving from end to end.
Quartz Hill Main Street
Courtesy of https://northwestrving.com
Here are the instructions for reaching the sites from the Melrose end of the route:
To reach the Canyon Creek Charcoal Kilns: Turn right on Canyon Creek Road on the west "outskirts" of
Glendale which we visited in the last entry. Continue on Canyon Creek Road for about 5 miles, until you
reach the kilns at: N45° 40.771 W112° 52.215
To reach Vipond Park from the kilns continue on Canyon Creek Road for just over 1.5 miles until you reach
a junction with a hard right turn at: N45° 40.237 W112° 53.834 Take the right hand turn which will take
you up a fairly steep one lane road to Vipond Park at the top.
To reach the ghost town of Quartz Hill from Vipond Park, continue on Quartz Hill Road through Vipond
Park for approximately 8 miles.
Camping
See the last entry for areas to camp at the Melrose end of the route. Click on the previous Quartz Hill entry
for areas to camp at the Wise River end of the route.
I hope you have enjoyed this loop trip though a portion of Montana’s historic mining areas and the many
options to camp while social distancing yourself from others.
Montana Ghost Town Loop Series: Part 1 - Coolidge, Part 2 - Bannack & Farlin, Part 3 - Glendale, Hecla,
Lion City & Trapper City, Part 4 - Canyon Creek, Vipond Park
By Dave Helgeson for https://northwestrving.com/ Dave Helgeson is the MHRV Show Director. He and his wife love to travel
across the west in their RV. Dave writes about all things RVing but loves to share destinations and boondocking advice.
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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
MINING CAMP DANGERS
Epidemics were fairly commonplace throughout the nineteenth century and knew no social boundaries.
Rich or poor, no person was immune. Typhoid and cholera plagued mining camps because
miners quickly polluted the water source. But measles, whooping cough and diphtheria also invaded
the communities. The great silver camp of Elkhorn that flourished in the 1880s has a particularly
pathetic legacy, reminding us that sometimes the sacrifices of parents—leaving home and
family for new opportunities—were minor compared to the sacrifices they imposed on their children.
Dr. William Dudley served as camp doctor
but could do nothing when a diphtheria epidemic
in 1889 claimed most of Elkhorn’s children. His
wife was pregnant with their second child, and the
Dudleys left Elkhorn abruptly, leaving their first
born son, a casualty of the epidemic, buried in the
hillside cemetery. During that same year, on September
27, Harry Walton, 9, and Albin Nelson, 10,
found a quicksilver container full of black powder.
Adults filled these containers to detonate for community
celebrations like the Fourth of July, and
had overlooked this one. The boys managed to
explode it and blew themselves to bits. They
share a grave in the small cemetery.
Young boy in a coffin. Illness knew no social boundaries in
Montana’s mining camps.
Montana Historical Society Photograph Archives
Mining-related accidents were a hazard to children, and explosives and mine shafts were not the
only perils. Dredging created its own danger. At Bannack in 1916,
three girls were enjoying the warmth of a summer afternoon,
splashing and wading in Grasshopper Creek. Laughing and talking,
they waded out into a pond created by the dredge boat, not
realizing they had gone too far. Suddenly the girls stepped off a
ledge into nine feet of water. None could swim. Twelve-year-old
Smith Paddock heard the commotion and managed to pull two of
the girls out, but the third girl, sixteen-year-old Dorothy Dunn,
drowned. -Ellen Baumler
Ellen Baumler is an award-winning author and Montana historian. A master at linking history
Dorothy Dunn, second in line on the
left, wading in the dredge pond at
Bannack. Courtesy of Kathie Stachler,
Dorothy's great-niece.
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
DO YOU KNOW SOMEONE WHO WOULD ENJOY THIS NEWSLETTER?? The digital version is FREE to all and we love
to share! Just have them send us an email at ghosttownsofmontana@gmail.com with NEWSLETTER in the subject
line to be added to the mailing list. Thank you!
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P a g e 6
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
Highland City, Montana
Highland City, in the midst of the towering Highland
Mountains, is located 26 miles south of Butte. The
town in its prime in the early 60’s, was the largest
community of Virginia City, Nevada and rivalled that
place as a mining and commercial center. Distributing
foodstuffs and other supplies to the lesser mining
camps, which included Butte, was no small part of the
business that helped maintain the city; but gold, discovered
in 1863 was the lodestone that drew people to the almost inaccessible Highland Gulch and
paved the way for the city’s growth.
Crude in its architecture and as crude in its administration of frontier law, Highland City was a typical
camp of the early west. Bustling and booming from the stimulus of gold pouring into the pockets of its
people, generosity was a habit and poverty was unknown. Men quarreled and killed each other and
were hanged forthwith for doing so. Strong liquor was plentiful but was rarely drunk to excess. Dance
halls of the frontier type were there, but with little of the petty knavery that characterized the less
prosperous camps. The place is still pointed out where a horse thief, captured some 20 miles west in
the Big Hole country, was hanged in 1865. Old timers claim that he was the only man hanged in the
city for anything short of murder.
But while Highland City did not shine as a center of outlawry and speedy justice as did some of the other
early camps, it was not lacking in the qualities that make for an orderly, if somewhat arbitrary, enforcement
of common law. A committee of safety, known as a
vigilance committee, was regularly elected and narratives of
the work and worries of this committee are recounted by the
surviving few who were numbered among her residents in
Highland’s palmy days.
Much gold, of a quality singularly pure, came out of Highland
Gulch. Evidences of immense placer workings still remain,
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
and in the adjacent gulches, men, whose memories run back to those earlier days, still ply their picks
and pans and eke a scanty existence from the reluctant gravel. Occasionally one finds a nugget or a
pocket of gold, and hope in an old heart builds a new Highland City on the fast disappearing ruins of
the old.
The decline of the city was as rapid as its rise. After seven years of affluence the stream of gold came
suddenly to an end, an in another year the exodus of people was practically complete. The 600 log
structures, many of them two-story dimensions, tumbled rapidly into decay. – This article appeared in
The Dillon Examiner, August 26, 1936. Accessed via: http://montananewspapers.org/
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 o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
The Smith Mine Disaster
I visited Smith Mine 3 time and have over 400 photographs
from my visits. There were no signs about, “No Trespassing” at
the site therefore we just walked in. We only took photographs
while we were there, no souvenirs. The end-to-end area we
traversed for photographing is just a bit over 1/4 mile. I will annotate
some of the photographs that I’m showing.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
The Smith Mine Disaster was the worst coal disaster in the state
of Montana. It
claimed the lives
of seventy-five people and destroyed the mining industry of
Bearcreek which had been built around it.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
The building in the foreground is where the furnaces
are located. The building in the far distance is
the home of the mine's director.
On February 27,
1943, Bearcreek,
Montana experienced
what remains
the worst
coal disaster in
the state. A combination
of carbon
monoxide and methane gas created an explosion killing seventy
-four of the seventy-seven men working in the mine. The three
men to survive were in the mine but did not see the explosion.
However, they described feeling a pressure on their ears but
hearing nothing before being blasted with air. One of the men
rushed to the phone to let the men on the surface know that
something was wrong but before he could he was overcome with
gas. The other two men were attempting to escape the mine
when they were
knocked to their feet
by the blast of air
and then fell unconscious
from the gas.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
Inside the stores and supplies room. All the cubbyholes
in this room still had screws, bolts, nuts,
washers, etc. in them.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
Mechanical room for receiving the coal and forwarding
it out to chutes for loading into the trains.
The explosion
knocked out the electricity,
preventing the
mine’s emergency system from sounding. However, other mines in the area sounded theirs, alerting the other
miners as well as those in the town that something was wrong in Smith Mine.
Three furnaces in this room that were covered with
asbestos. We did not get too close to them.
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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
Men came from adjacent mines and from the town to
rescue the men still trapped. Rescuers who went into
the mine faced serious danger from the combination of
carbon monoxide and methane gas. The farther anyone
went into the mine, the more the gas took a toll, with
many tripping, falling, hallucinating, or becoming disoriented.
One of the rescuers breathed in too much gas
and died as a result.
The seventy-four men who died either died immediately
in the blast or were killed by the gas. The precise
extent of the three survivors’ injuries is not documented in the sources, but they did spend a few days in
the hospital.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
The tragedy deeply affected the victims’ families. Family
members spent sixty-three hours waiting to hear what had
happened and get updates about their family members. The
town was small, so virtually everyone there was a part of a
mining family and thus knew or was related to someone
who had died. The scale of the loss devastated the families,
and many left Bearcreek afterwards because of their grief.
Photo by Shawn Shawhan
Bearcreek was small before and the disaster only made it
worse. The mine closed permanently, and the town’s coal production fell. The biggest hit to the town’s
economy and population came when the railroad ceased operating in 1953, ten years after the disaster. The
railroad was the easiest way to ship coal, and with it closed, most of the mines followed suit, with the last
mine closing in the 1970s. The Smith Mine disaster was effectively the beginning of the end for
Bearcreek. - Courtesy of Shawn Shawhan, Check out more of his beautiful photos at: https://abyssart.smugmug.com/?
fbclid=IwAR0g5qKKbL-9fGEjGeQOfnoe7G6IIxGIYn298nyBvXDiHu36eR34AqgCzA4
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