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Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
THOSE BANNACKITES
From the Choteau Acantha, Mar. 14, 1929
May 4, 1906: In recent years Bannack, the first capital of Montana has been
comparatively a dead town. Not
many things out of the ordinary
have happened there to cause
people to look that way. Years
ago when this country was new,
Bannack was about the liveliest
place in the northwest and stirring
scenes were of daily occurrence
upon its streets. Bannack’s
reputation spread far and wide,
and that reputation was not a bad one either, when looked at in a broadminded
manner. Her people were among the first who said that law and order
must reign in the Rockies, that wrong-doing must cease, that crime
should end in these parts and that daylight deals should replace the acts of
midnight hours. As a result one of the most desperate bands of outlaws that
ever infested a community was broken up. Henry Plummer and a number of
his ilk took passage into the Great Beyond by the noose route and then
came peace and a feeling of safety for all men who dwelt in these parts.
Many of the men who witnessed early day events and who assisted in restoring
law and order still live and are honored for the part they played.
Many of these old fellows who helped make this country what it is today
still live in Bannack and the vicinity. They are a just and good-hearted people,
are those Bannackites. They deal squarely with the world, even at times
when they are not dealt likewise. They have lived in peace and contentment
for many years, satisfied with their little homes built in early days while others
have struggled for grander homes and sought fortune in other parts of
the country. Around their hearths happiness has reigned; they have dwelt in
the gulch on the Grasshopper in peaceful contentment; a sort of satisfying
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Accessed via: https://montananewspapers.org
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P a g e 2
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
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
halo, unseen, but felt, has hovered over their little
homes and the people living there have learned to
take certain pride in being known as Bannackites. But
along with it all has lived that spark that inspired
them to rise up years ago and resent the outrages of
unprincipled human beings.
If reports are true, parties recently attempted to take
undue advantage of the Bannack people and selected darkness that comes with the midnight hour as
the proper time to carry out their plans. Something happened. Those Bannackites, who are accustomed
to act squarely with the world, took things into their own hands. A “paint party” was held. Drastic
means were resorted to by unknown Bannack parties, but there was certainly provocation.
According to the Bannackites the act of locating certain placer ground there, which took in a large part
of Bannack was a holdup scheme pure and simple and yet, legal. The dredge boat that will soon be put
to work would have to pass through this ground and probably it was thought that the dredge boat
company could be made to “dig up” for the privilege of passing through. There was apparently some
easy money in sight. The business advancement of Bannack was not an object nor was the development
of the placer grounds an object, that’s what the Bannack people say. And it certainly looks that
way. If that was the case then the parties concerned in locating didn’t give a whoop whether Bannack
interest were hurt or not. If the dredge boat company refused to “dig up” whatever was demanded
and decided to not put the dredge into operation, no one would be hurt to any great extent except
Bannack business and that didn’t cut any ice.
When capital or promoters appear in our mining districts and show that they mean business and it is
their honest intention to develop our mineral grounds, they always meet with a hearty co-operation on
the part of the people. We are always glad to see them. When the object is different and midnight
hours are selected to put shameful schemes into effect there is just cause for resentment.
Jumping claims is lawful in Montana even when it sometimes
works hardship upon our citizens. Midnight claim-jumping
doesn’t appeal to the good nature of mining people in general,
and it shouldn’t. When parties stoop to deeds which require
darkness rather than daylight, even when such deeds are lawful,
the parties do not deserve much sympathy if they pull a weight
down on their own heads. Before you judge those Bannackites
too harshly, put yourself in their place and think it over. – “The
Dillon Tribune”, Accessed via: www.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
GRANITE BUTTE LOOKOUT
The Lookout was built at an elevation of 7600 feet in 1933 or 34. The 1937 Regional
Office inspection noted: “T20 standard L4, good. Standard lightening
protection is installed. On a road and needs a good toilet. Built for $1,292.”
Mark Hopkins, who was the lookout here in 1939 and 1940 shared an old photo
of the lookout. He remembered that the first smoke he reported was from
the train at Blossburg. He said the food was good and he made $90 a month.
He said he could, and did, listen in on the phone calls between Lincoln and
Canyon Creek for entertainment. In 1962 the original lookout was replaced
with the current structure, a standard R-6 Flat cab on top of a 20’treated timber
tower. After another 50 years of on again, off again use, it was time for
complete restoration. The Montana Wilderness Association and volunteers for the Continental Divide
Trail (http://wildmontana.org/wildword/towering-accomplishment) completed a rebuild in 2016.
The lookout was added to the National Historic Lookout Register in 2008. It is being maintained for
its historic and recreational value and is now in the cabin rental program for your enjoyment. Please
help us maintain the past for the future.
If you would like more information, please contact the Lincoln Ranger District at 406-362-7000. Helena-Lewis
and Clark National Forest
Some of the historical information excerpted from The Helena National Forest, The Early Days, author
Vicky MacLean
MONUMENT PEAK LOOKOUT
The L-4 style was by far the most popular live-in lookout. It came in three generations;
with a 14x14 foot wood frame cab, windows all around; sitting on
the ground, or atop pole or timber towers up to 100 feet tall. The 1929-1932
version featured a gable (2-sided) wood shingle roof. The 1933-1935 version
had a 4-sided hip roof. The 1936-1952 version had a similar hip roof, with extended
ceiling joists to hold the window shutters open. This lookout was built
in 1936 by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and is the only remaining
original CCC constructed lookout on the Lewis and Clark National Forest. It
was located to “look out” over the Little Belt Mountain range. Can you tell
what version of the L-4 style it was built in? In recent years, recreation and
historic preservation have become important aspects of the agency’s mission. The lookout was listed
in the National Historic Lookout Register in 2005 and is maintained and managed for its historic and
recreational value. It has been removed from its original 50 foot tower, restored and added to the
cabin rental program for your enjoyment. Please help us maintain the past for the future.
If you would like more information, please contact White Sulphur Springs Ranger District at 406-547
-3361. Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest
Information on Montana’s Historical Lookouts and photos provided by: https://www.fs.usda.gov/
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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
Moss Mansion
The beautiful Moss Mansion in Billings—now a
house museum—is a twenty-five-room residence
built in 1903. It was the longtime home of the
Preston Moss family. New York architect R. J.
Hardenbergh, whose work includes New York
City’s Waldorf Astoria, designed the elegant mansion.
Mahogany and walnut woodwork, an onyx
fireplace, rose silk and gold leaf wall coverings,
and stained glass windows are among the luxurious
details.
Montana Historical Society Photograph Archives,
PAc 2004-17
Preston Moss arrived in Billings in 1892 on his way to Butte from Missouri and saw
Billings’ financial promise. He became a prominent banker; helped develop the sugar
beet industry, the Billings Light and Water Company, and the Billings Polytechnic Institute
(now Rocky Mountain College); and with a partner ran eighty thousand head
of sheep and several thousand head of cattle. He also pioneered the Billings Gazette
and was instrumental in the creation of the Huntley Irrigation Project. He even started
a toothpaste factory and a meat packing plant. Moss also promoted an idea he
called Mossmain. This was a futuristic city he planned to build ten miles west of
Billings. World War II intervened, and Preston Moss died in 1947, never realizing this
dream. Melville, the Mosses’ middle daughter, was seven when her family moved into
the mansion. She was a talented musician and played the harp, piano, and bass from
an early age. Melville traveled the world and never married, but the mansion was her
home throughout her life. She died in 1984 at eighty-two. Because of Melville’s good
stewardship, the grand interiors remain unchanged today. –Ellen Baumler
From More Montana Moments
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
Mining remnants and old cabins are spread throughout the Oro Fino Mining District. The district was primarily active as a
lode mining district in the 1880's. The principal mine, the Champion, was the nucleus of
a small town of the same name. The town was described in 1890 as a village of 60 to 70
buildings in full view, with buildings in the forest,
in every gulch on every hill for miles
around. The town had a lumber yard, grocery
store, restaurants, barber shops, butcher
shops, a post office and of course, several saloons. Photos 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 Mining Family Named Carpp
Charlie and Ina Carpp holding a string of
grouse at their Moose Lake cabin.
Charles Carpp Sr. was a colorful buffalo hunter, Indian fighter and miner.
Born in 1852, in New York, he came west from Michigan at the age of fourteen
where he prospected in the Black Hills and then established a trading
post near Fort Benton. At one time he had as many as ten skinners working
for him while hunting buffalo as far south as Texas. The skins sold for $1.00
a piece. When the buffalo ran out he moved to the Pintler area and on the
ridge bearing his name found silver float. In 1887 he called in government
surveyors and they gave his name to the lakes, creek and ridge.
The Carpp Mine is described in Emmons, “Geology and Ore Deposits”(1913)
from a 1907 report by D, F. McDonald as located about two miles northeast
of Carpp Lake on the south slope of a very steep canyon drained by a (Middle) fork of Rock Creek. About 1000
feet of work had been done in drifts and crosscuts. The Ore consists of white quartz and silicate limestone stained
with copper carbonates and carries a little pyrite and copper glance. The richest ore, according to McDonald, was
near a crosscutting body of quartz porphyry encountered in the tunnel about 220 feet from the portal. At one time
Charlie was offered $50,000 for his mining claim but refused to sell. Not long after the silver vein ran out, and he
looked in vain to find it again. Thirty years later he sold the claim for $800.00.
At the age of forty, in 1892, Charlie traveled back to Michigan to marry Ina Mae Hazard on January 14, 1892 and
they returned to live in their log cabin. To this marriage was born one son, Charles Jr., in Philipsburg, on August 14,
1906. Besides discovering ore on Carpp Mountain, Charlie Sr., patented claims on Willow Creek and was foreman of
placer mines at Basin Gulch. Charles Senior died at the age of eighty-eight in the first week of April, 1941 and was
interred in the Philipsburg Cemetery.
Ina died at the age of eight-three, after living for seven months in a Rest Home in Drummond on February 7, 1952.
Survivors were her son and daughter in law and two grandsons.
Charlie Jr., graduated from Granite County High School in 1924. and after attending Electrical College, in Los Angeles
for one year, young Charlie found a job at Moose lake where Bessie Dunn had William Isom and Arthur Taggart
building a mill and residence. When the partnership fell apart Isom hired Charlie as caretaker of the property during
the winter of 1932. Taking advantage of the situation, Charlie married, a long time girlfriend, Pauline Dorsett in Bozeman
on November 1, 1932 and brought her to Moose Lake to spend this first winter of their marriage.
The story goes that they ate moose, moose and more moose to get through the 6 months of winter. Pauline said
they snow-shoed everywhere except the outhouse. According to “Gold on a Shoe String” Pauline went out just once
in eight months. She snow-shoed to the Carey ranch (where East Fork and Middle Fork merge) and caught a ride
into town with the mailman. In my possession is a crocheted doily given to me by Annie McCale Sanders that Pauline
gifted to her.
To this marriage was born two sons: Charles Walter and Larry Dale. Charles Carpp Jr. became foreman of the Sapphire
mine in 1936 and was able to convince J. Walter Kaiser that the claims were financially solvent and American
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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
Gem Mining Syndicate sold the Rock Creek claims to Charles Carpp Jr. and J.W. Kaiser in
1936/37. I found in August Erickson’ diary this notation “October 29, 1937—Sapphire
News------The mines have been leased to Charley Carrp. 20% on 3 years-$10,000 basis.”
They lived in the Philipsburg area until 1943 while Charlie was in the mining business
and had the partnership in the Sapphire Mines. Carpp and Kaiser leased the claims to
George Carter when the market for sapphires tanked. The couple next lived in Butte until
1948 then moved to Dillon where Charlie worked in the hardware business. Charlie
was also a sales representative for Coast to Coast Hardware, until they returned to
Philipsburg when he retired.
Charles Jr. died at the age of eighty-three in the Granite County Memorial Nursing Home
on April 21, 1990 following a long illness and is buried in the Philipsburg Cemetery. Survivors
were: Pauline and the two sons. Pauline, died November 16, 2002 at the age of
eighty-nine at Redmond, Washington. –Courtesy of the Granite County History Blog
Charlie (Jr.), Pauline, Charles
Walter and Larry Dale Carpp
Circa 1940.
The purpose of the Granite County History Blog (https://granitecountyhistory.blogspot.com/) is to share and seek information on the history of
Granite County, Montana. In a few cases our topics will lap over into adjacent counties as mining districts especially do not respect the later
boundaries imposed by politicians! It is a project of members of the Granite County Historical Society, an organization founded in 1978 by the late
Barry Engrav of Philipsburg and now comprised of 8 members dedicated to preserving and interpreting historical documents, artifacts,
and sites in the greater Philipsburg area. Our goal is to interest current residents, folks with family roots, and those with an academic interest in
the area to add their knowledge to this blog as an ongoing project to deepen and in some cases correct the narrative of the people and events that
shaped history in this part of Montana. The recent explosion of scanned historical documents onto the internet is making it possible to greatly
speed up historical research, refine historical chronology, and deepen historical interpretation. Perhaps we are entering into a "golden age" of
research into our past! Anyone with an interest in the Philipsburg area or Montana history is invited to discuss the topics of our posts, as well as
their own data and sources, which we hope will create an ongoing dialogue about the area now known as Granite County.
Smuggler is located about seven miles from Sheridan on Mill
Creek. The mine was claimed by John and Thomas Cavanaugh,
James McDonnell, Mrs. Clara Conley and Carrie Herman in
1897. In the late 1920s the Smuggler property consisted of 13
unpatented claims producing gold and silver. The property
was developed by a 117-foot shaft; two adits of 150 and 200
feet; 340 feet of drifts; 425 feet of cross-cuts; 450 feet of raises
and 160 feet of winzes. The hydroelectric plant on the Emma B. claim powered a 100 ton amalgamation
and concentration mill. This mill contained a crusher, a No. 54 Marcy ball mill, classifier, 3 Wilfley
tables, motors, and pumps. Other improvements included 25
buildings including an office, assay office and cabins to house
45 people. The site had water, electric and telephone systems.
Although the operation produced $24,117.03 in gold
from 1930 to 1933, the milling process allowed $4 per ton
profit to escape into the tails. Activity was suspended in
1934 while flotation techniques were examined. No further
production was recorded in the historic period.
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 o f
M o n t a n a N e w s l e t t e r
Grizzly Gulch Lime Kilns- Helena, Montana. Lime manufacture
was an essential industry for building in brick
and stone in the nineteenth century. The Grizzly Gulch
outcrops and the kilns below them supplied the entire region
with lime of the highest quality. Joseph O'neill built
the first of these kilns in the late 1860s. Hewn timbers,
hand-forged metal braces, and finely laid fire brick
shipped from the East illustrate the kilns' sturdy construction.
Workers blasted or quarried the limestone out of the
hills behind, conveyed the rocks on handcars to the kilns
or tumbled them down the embankment, and dumped them into the tops of the chimneys. Pine fires in the furnace
beneath burned constantly. After several days, workers shoveled the powdered lime into the cooling shed
adjacent to the kiln and teamsters hauled it to the building site. Each kiln could produce some twenty tons of
lime every eight hours. Irish-born James McKelvey later leased and then owned the kilns, supplying the mortar
for the construction of the state capitol. Lack of railroad access eventually forced closure circa 1910 although
one kiln operated again briefly in the 1930s. -National Register of Historic Places
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
DIAMOND CITY
Diamond City c. 1870
June 2, 1932: Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Mueller and sons Glenn and
George came from Lewistown for the two-day holiday and spent
Sunday going over old workings at Diamond City being accompanied
from here by Miss Luella Watson. Mr. Mueller is compiling
data on the early day history of the old mining camp. Mrs.
Mueller’s father, the late C. W. Cook of White Sulphur Springs, she
states used to have charge of the “Ditch Office” in Diamond in the
early 70’s and one time an old Dutchman who operated a placer
on Montana Bar asked him to “clean up” his sluice boxes for him,
which Mr. Cook did and got a bushel of gold dust. The old man did
not have any idea of the value of the clean-up and when he got ready to quit the camp, so little was he effected by the
vast amount of gold he had, he sold all of his tools such as picks, shovels, axes, etc., which netted him something like
$25.00. During the sojourn of the Mueller family in Diamond Sunday, John Smith, who now resides there panned a pan
of dirt for them and got several nice colors. He then gave the boys a gold
-pan and told them to pan some for themselves which they did taking
the dirt from a place close beside the road in the location that was approximately
in front of the G. A. Hampton hotel. Several nice colors were
panned much to the surprise and delight of the boys and there will no
doubt be a “gold rush” among the Boy Scouts of Lewistown upon the
arrival of the boys with their gold securely corked in a small glass vial. -
The Townsend Star, Accessed via: www.montananewspapers.org
Abandoned cabin in the gulch by Jolene EwertHintz
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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
From a late 1940s/early 1950s brochure: OX BOW CAFÉAlder,
MT
The Ox Bow Café at Alder, Montana, is just a short drive from
Butte, and is located in the heart of Montana’s most colorful
history. Just a stone’s throw to the north you will find old
Robbers Roost, famous hangout of Henry Plummer’s Gang.
To the east and south, Virginia City still stands and lives over
the days of color and strife so well known to the old timers
who have passed along this trail in the endless search for
wealth. This area through Alder Gulch once boasted over 40,000 inhabitants, and $200,000,000 in gold
was taken from this fourteen-mile stretch.
Speaking of stretches, George Ives did his last one up the road just a few miles towards Virginia City.
George was the first customer the Vigilantes had, but the boys apparently gave him their best services, because
there is no record of any complaints. Of course George kicked a little at first, but appeared not to
mind afterwards.
Well, they say gold and good food is where you find it. Ah yes, pahdner, start digging. -Bea Burrill
Ad from The Madisonian, June 12, 1959, Accessed via:
www.montananewspapers.org
Current Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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