׉?4ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1Wtl_0iPRIibOfdeSp0jqBAfgOiSnBt0tYEmGFSl0aQ k`׉	 7cassandra://_6p3ozs4NNqPzfN4eqy93uuFlcW3CKVyau7Y3-2dlyYy`s׉	 7cassandra://yuAzkHbSxVhdM3Qn5S93q02nn7qsDx-KvuvZOu4RMzU%` ׉	 7cassandra://F7CWZKMoPQkfPIwNrTmQvU7O5_c6rGtGMQbjjbSsLoE M̬͠]^m;S4ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1Wtl_0iPRIibOfdeSp0jqBAfgOiSnBt0tYEmGFSl0aQ k`׉	 7cassandra://_6p3ozs4NNqPzfN4eqy93uuFlcW3CKVyau7Y3-2dlyYy`s׉	 7cassandra://yuAzkHbSxVhdM3Qn5S93q02nn7qsDx-KvuvZOu4RMzU%` ׉	 7cassandra://F7CWZKMoPQkfPIwNrTmQvU7O5_c6rGtGMQbjjbSsLoE M̬͠]^m;S4ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1Wtl_0iPRIibOfdeSp0jqBAfgOiSnBt0tYEmGFSl0aQ k`׉	 7cassandra://_6p3ozs4NNqPzfN4eqy93uuFlcW3CKVyau7Y3-2dlyYy`s׉	 7cassandra://yuAzkHbSxVhdM3Qn5S93q02nn7qsDx-KvuvZOu4RMzU%` ׉	 7cassandra://F7CWZKMoPQkfPIwNrTmQvU7O5_c6rGtGMQbjjbSsLoE M̬͠]^m;S4ט   (u׈   S{  ׈E^l;S-׉EiGhost Towns and History
April 12, 2018
Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
Ends Hunt For Rich Girl
Often the hunt for a rich wife
ends when the man meets a
woman that uses Electric
Bitters. Her strong nerves tell
in a bright brain and even
temper. Her peach-bloom
complexion and ruby lips
result from her pure blood;
her bright eyes from
restful sleep; her elastic step
from firm, free muscles, all
telling of the health and
strength Electric Bitters
gives a woman, and the freedom
from indigestion, backache,
headache, fainting and
dizzy spells they promote!
Everywhere they are woman's
favorite remedy. If weak
or ailing try them. 50c at all
Druggists
- Ad from The Bear Paw Mountaineer,
1912
M a i d e n , M o n t a n a
“Skookum Joe” Anderson, Jones, Snow, Frank “Pony” McPartland and a
handful of others were credited with the discovery of the mines in the vicinity
of Maiden.
The
Maiden
townsite
was established
in
1881.
Buildings
were
constructed
among
what
had previously existed as a tent camp. Where did the name “Maiden”
come from?? Some say it was from an early prospector by the name of
Maden who put up a sign “Camp Maden” and the I was later added in to create
Maiden. Others say
the name came from the
nickname of the daughter
of an early visitor to the
town; “the little maiden”.
Either way, Maiden was
official (although sometimes
referred to as
Maidenville). The
Maginnis Mine, the
Maiden today by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Spotted Horse, and the Collar
Mine were the best known properties. The ore in the Spotted Horse was
known as “high grade” and was found in pockets. Over 53,000,000 in gold
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y
was taken from Maiden.
Town of Maiden from sketch made when it was on the Fort Maginnis Military Reservation
and the commanding officer ordered the citizens to pack up all their belongings
and leave.—Courtesy of the Choteau Montanan
The town continued to grow and even went after the
county seat of Fergus County but was beat out by
Lewistown. The population peaked at about 1,200 in
By 1882, the town grew to include
lumber homes, eight saloons,
two clothing stores, five
general stores, a butcher shop, a
blacksmith, two barbers, a doctor,
a hotel, and a restaurant. The local
attorney was S.C. Edgerton,
son of Montana’s first territorial
governor. In 1883, the town’s existence
was threatened because it
was situated in the Fort Maginnis
Military Reservation. In the end,
the army relented and reduced the
size of the military reservation so
Maiden and its mines would be
excluded.
the late 1880s and dwindled from there. Mines began
to shut down and buildings stood vacant. After a
couple of fires, not much was left of Maiden.
Located about 20 miles NE of Lewistown, remnants
of the past can be seen along Maiden’s Montana and
Main Streets, mixed in with newer homes as well. Structures are on private property so please be respectful.
׉	 7cassandra://bRcryEhhlGgydAurG-nSdov4jVy77KJweQK02uHfLk4(U` ^l;S/׉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
I still stand strong as I watch over
the town.
These days, people come from all
around.
I think about the years and all I
have seen.
The members, the students, the teachers,
the dreams.
I hold my head high when they stop
for a shoot.
I hope I have shown them the past is
not mute.
Photo: Masonic Lodge/Schoolhouse– Bannack, Montana
Photography and Poetry by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Coulson, Montana was once a little frontier town located
on the north bank of the Yellowstone River approximately
one mile east of the present day downtown Billings. Landowner
John Alderson and a pioneer merchant and farmer
named P.W. McAdow settled into the area along the river
in 1877, giving the area its first residents and the men who
built the town's early foundation.
Marking the site where the long-gone town once hoped to
thrive with the construction of the railroad but instead withered
because of it, a plaque set in the park in 1982 by the
Yellowstone Historical Society succinctly memorializes its
five-year heyday, from 1877 to 1882.
"Born by the River and killed by the Railroad, giving to
Billings her best residents, to Boothill her residue, and to
the Yellowstone her memories," the plaque reads.
Photo: Main Street, Coulson, MT 1882, Courtesy of: The
Western Heritage Center
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G h o s t T o w n s a n d H i s t o r y
Tuberculosis?
T o w e r , M o n t a n a
There is no medicine that will
cure consumption (called
such because the patient
rapidly loses weight and
seems to be “consumed”). It
is a waste of time and money
to use so-called “consumptive
cures”. It is important to
breath air that is fresh and
pure, to eat an abundance of
good food, and to stop heavy
work and worry. To obtain the
first, the patient must live out
of doors. Also, use counterirritation
over the diseased
spot in the lung with tartar
emetic ointment.
On December 15, 1873, in Philadelphia,
George W. Cass, Charlemagne Tower, Thomas
L. Jewett, William G. Moorhead, John K.
Ewing and A.B. Nettleton incorporated the
Northwest Company for the purpose of mining
and milling silver ore from the Speckled Trout
Lode located in the vicinity of Philipsburg,
Montana Territory. A ten-stamp silver mill was constructed and the settlement that
grew up around the operations was named Tower after Charlemagne Tower. Tower
was occasionally also known as Stumptown.
Other mines opened, and operated until 1893 when the repeal of the Sherman Silver
Purchase Act forced the closure of many silver mines throughout the country. The late
1890's and early 1900's saw the gradual reopening of the mines. The World War I
years of 1917-1918 saw a major boom in mining manganese, another metal abundant
in the area. Manganese was in great demand for the hardening of steel for the war effort.
After the war, manganese dioxide was in demand for use in dry-cell batteries and
ores from this area were unexcelled for the purpose. Manganese mining continued until
1968. The population of Tower, said to be in the hundreds at one time, gradually declined.
The last two deep level mines, The True Fissure and The Scratch Awl, closed in
1971. A few small silver mining operations near the surface continued until the early
1980's.
1880 Stagecoach Rules from Wells Fargo
Ash Cakes
 1 cup white cornmeal
 1/2 cup flour (optional)
 1/2 tsp. salt
 Water
Mix dry ingredients. Add
enough cold water to make
a firm dough. Form the
dough into thin cakes.
Clear coals from an area
of the campfire and lay the
cakes on the hot earth.
Rake coals and ash over
the cakes and let them
bake for about five
minutes.
1. Abstinence from liquor is
requested, but if you must
drink, share the bottle. To
do otherwise makes you
appear selfish and unneighborly.
2.
If ladies are present, gentlemen are urged to forego smoking cigars and pipes as
the odor of same is repugnant to the Gentle Sex. Chewing tobacco is permitted
but spit WITH the wind, not against it.
3. Gentlemen must refrain from the use of rough language in the presence of ladies
and children.
4. Buffalo robes are provided for your comfort during cold weather. Hogging
robes will not be tolerated and the offender will be made to ride with the driver.
5. Don’t snore loudly while sleeping or use your fellow passenger’s shoulder for a
pillow; he or she may not understand and friction may result.
6. Firearms may be kept on your person for use in emergencies. Do not fire them
for pleasure or shoot at wild animals as the sound riles the horses.
7. In the event of runaway horses, remain calm. Leaping from the coach in panic
will leave you injured, at the mercy of the elements, hostile Indians and hungry
coyotes.
8. Forbidden topics of discussion are stagecoach robberies and Indian uprisings.
9. Gents guilty of unchivalrous behavior toward lady passengers will be put off the
stage. It’s a long walk back. A word to the wise is sufficient.
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