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Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
M o n t a n a ’ s H o t S p r i n g s
Montana’s hot springs were (and still are!) a great way to relax and socialize.
Some waters even claimed to cure such ills as bad kidneys, rheumatism
and paralysis. Let’s look at a few early “hot spots”...
The Dillon Examiner, April 13, 1927
www.montananewspapers.org
Puller Hot Springs located 20 miles south of Alder and named for James
Pulller, who developed the springs in 1872, was among the list of healers. A
solfatara, it is reported has been discovered contiguous to ‘Belzebub’ at the
Puller Hot Springs. We always have held to the opinion that they would discover
something of that kind up here.” -The Madisonian Newspaper, May
11, 1876. But did these springs really possess the power to heal? According
to the following accounts and numerous others, they surely did…In June of
1875, The Madisonian reported that Mrs. Burdess of Divide was in a crippled
condition from rheumatism
but just a couple weeks
spent bathing in the Puller
Springs had entirely restored
her health. In June of 1876,
Bob Peters reported that the
healing waters cured his paralysis
like “raising one from
the dead”. The cures were still
coming in January of 1895
when the same newspaper reported that Albert Walsh of Granite Gulch
who had been suffering from rheumatism for six months had begun rapidly
recovering by bathing at the famous health resort. The springs, furnished
with a hotel, bathhouses, salon and dance hall, also made a great destination
for weddings, Christmas parties, hen parties (something like today’s
bachelorette parties), even a Thanksgiving Ball in 1877 (the ticket would only
set you back $3.00 and they promised good music!).
Puller Hot Springs in 1985 by Jeff Birkby
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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
Another popular spot, Pipestone Hot Springs located between Butte and Whitehall was discovered in
the 1860s by John Paul who had homesteaded in the area. Pipestone supposedly got its name from the
material found in the area that was used to make
clay pipes. Legend tells us the area was once dotted
with wickiups and served as a meeting spot for local
tribes under truce.
Ollie Barnes became the first postmistress of Pipestone
in the 1880s and under her management of
the springs, a hotel, barn and guest house were constructed.
The post office closed but would open
again in 1887 with John Paul once again serving as
owner. The cost to enjoy the springs and all its amenities was $2 a day. Ollie and her husband, Charles
Bucket, would take over yet again in the 1890s. John Paul passed away in 1913. Pipestone Springs became
a station on the Northern Pacific’s main line.
The property was acquired around 1918 by a consortium
of Butte businessmen and with that, the hotel was
joined by a bathhouse and 100 canvas-roofed cottages.
The businessmen offered a sanitarium, an indoor swimming
pool known as “the plunge” and for a time, a golf
course. Croquet games in the afternoon and dances in
the evenings followed by a good soak were enjoyed by
many in the area. The resort closed in 1963.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Warm Springs, Montana is named after the "mound" where scalding hot water surfaces. Because of
thick grass and saline deposits surrounding the area, white-tailed deer were often found there. The
Shoshone named the cone Soo'-Ke-En Car'-Ne
(lodge of the white-tailed deer). When the
warm springs were discovered in 1865 by Louis
Belanger, he went on to purchase the land
and help develop a community consisting of a
hotel and bathhouses to serve the public. A
privately owned mental hospital was established
at the site in the 1870s and in 1912, the
Warm Springs State Hospital became a state
institution.
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
Captain William Clark, Sacagawea and their party came across what they called a “boiling hot spring” on a
late afternoon in the summer of 1806. Clark wrote in his
journal entry: “…we arrived at a Boiling Spring situated
about 100 paces from a large Easterly fork of the Small
river which beads in the Snowey mountains to the S.E. and
S.W. of the Springs. This Spring [15 yds. in circume, boils
up all over the bottom which is Stoney] contains a very
considerable quantity of water, and actually blubbers with
heat for 20 paces below where it rises…I directt Sergt.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Pryor and John Shields to put each a peice of meat in the water of different Sises. The one about the Size of
my 3 fingers cooked dun in 25 minits the other much thicker was 32 minits before it became Sufficiently dun.”
This spot where the party enjoyed their tasty dinner became the warm, bubbling waters of Jackson Hot
Springs in the Big Hole Valley.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Wells Hotel in Garnet, Montana was host to
what was known as the Calico Ball. Each lady who
would like to attend (The Calico) would make a calico
necktie that matched the dress she would be
wearing to the ball that evening. The neckties were
placed in sealed envelopes.
When the gentlemen arrived, each would
choose an envelope and put the tie on, then he
would search for his sweetheart with the matching
dress. They would dance the night away and enjoy
a supper following the ball.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Coolidge, Montana- In 1914, the town of Coolidge hummed with
activity. Named for U.S. President Calvin Coolidge, a personal friend
of founder, William R. Allen, life in the town moved to the rhythm of
the mine. The streets were full of sound and movement, the clang of
heavy machinery a constant in the background, as men came and
went from the mine. The little town that once boasted a population
of 350 was as modern as any of the time with both telephone service
and electricity via lines that ran over the hill from Divide. But the town was short-lived. With the failure of
the Elkhorn Mining Enterprise and the onset of The Great Depression, by 1932 Coolidge could no longer support
its citizens. Today, Coolidge is a fading reminder of the fortunes made and lost of the mining camps that
dotted Montana's mountains in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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8P 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
This is the way Granite, Montana
looked at itself over 125 years ago, when it reported
its “biography” for a souvenir edition of
the Helena Journal: “The town of Granite is situated
in the Rockies, 6,000 feet above sea level;
has a population of 2,500 people, and for
rugged, picturesque mountain scenery stands
prominent in Montana history. It enjoys the distinguished
honor of possessing the richest silver
mine in the United States, the Granite
mountain. Besides the Bi-Metallic, which is a
dividend paying mine of no small magnitude,
there are mines that skirt the town such as the
Elizabeth, East Granite, Zeus, Fannie Parnell,
Lord Nelson, Granite Belle, Gold Coin, Morning
Star, Cleveland and Young America. Mining is
the chief pursuit of the people. There is no other
town in the state where people are mingled together in such harmony as in Granite. Of the various
nationalities the Irish and the Cornish are in the ascendence. There are four organized bodies of
religion: the Presbyterian, the Methodist Episcopal, Church of England, and Catholic. Attendance at
these churches is progressively large. In the way of amusement, since the completion of the Miners'
Union building (a $20,000 stone and brick structure) the hall has been constantly favored with social
parties, dances, concerts and operas of the highest order. The Rod and Gun Club and Baseball
Club are trimming their weapons for what they believe will terminate in a successful season.
Through the untiring efforts of a favored few a fire system has been inaugurated for the protection of
property, and the appliances for extinguishing a fire
are justly ample. Tom Trevaille, postmaster is chief
of the department. In the mayor’s absence, Deputy
Sheriff D.A. McLeod disciplines the unruly, while P.
Gallagher and Nixon give every one justice in the
courts. Employees of the Granite Mountain, BiMetallic
and Elizabeth mining companies find in the
reading room a desirable place to spend leisure
hours. The hospital, under the able direction of Doctors
Sligh and Power, maintains a reputable name,
and is a credit to the people. Hon. G.J. Reek, one of
the framers of our state constitution, resides over the
Fourth of July Parade in Granite, Circa 1900, Courtesy of The
Montana Memory Project
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
public schools in a manner suited to the endorsement of all. The professor is ably assisted in this
work by Miss May Kennedy and Miss Effie R. Buck. The attendance is about two hundred.”Accessed
at www.montananewspapers.org.
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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 Granite Mountain-Speculator fire of June 8,
1917 took the lives of 168 men working in Butte,
Montana that day making it hard rock mining’s
greatest disaster. The mayor at the time gave local
miners some stern advice in that week’s newspaper…
A
flood of telegrams and letters from anxious
mothers and sisters have been pouring into the
office of Mayor W. H. Maloney since the disaster
on the hill, and the mayor made the suggestion this morning that every miner in Butte, whose mother
is in the east, write a letter tonight.
“Mothers in the east are anxious about their sons here in Butte,” said the mayor today, showing a
stock of letters. “Most of these don’t realize there are dozens of mines in Butte and there are 20,000
or more miners here. They are afraid for their sons and those who have neglected writing home
should be ashamed of themselves.”
“I suggest that every miner in Butte who has a mother or sister in the east sit down tonight and write
a long letter home. Most of us are careless about our mothers- the best friends we have in the world.
If we stopped to think about it, there isn’t one of us who wouldn’t do anything in the world to save
those old gray heads from worry.”
“One mother writes me that she hasn’t heard from her Tommie for six months. I have sent for Tommie
and I believe he has a good lecture coming. She is afraid he is dead. I saw him the other night
laughing and talking with a bunch of friends. At the same time his old mother back in Milwaukee
was awake all night worrying about her boy.”
“I suggest we all get together on this thing; that every one of us do something for our mothers this
very day. Those who have mothers in the east ought to write and send a money order for a trip to the
theater or something that will please the old folks.”- Accessed via: https://
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ , Feb. 28, 2021
Ads from The Bear Paw Mountaineer, Dec. 14, 1911, Accessed via www.montananewspapers.org
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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
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Hassel, Montana got its start as a placer camp
called St. Louis in the 1860s. It had emerged around Indian
Creek (west of Townsend) and the gold it had produced. In
1875, The Helena Independent described the camp as “a
live little place and a good winter camp for all who have
employment…Some 35-40 men at work. Mr. John Murray is
keeping a boarding house at Cheatem, two miles above
town and feeding more than half the camp with the best the market affords.”
Placer mining died out by the 1880s causing stamp mills, sluicing operations and later, dredging, to take over.
A Post office was opened in 1895 which prompted the camp to change its name. As both Montana and Missouri
were commonly abbreviated as MO, mail and freight
were getting mixed up between St. Louis, Missouri and St.
Louis, Montana. The town held a meeting, and the new
name of Hassel was chosen after an early day miner.
The new wave of mining revived the camp and was reported
as such by a representative of the Helena Weekly Herald in
1896: “There is a vast change since my last visit…At that
time…a few of the pioneer miners, Wm. Rick, Joe Hassel,
Geo. Weston, Charlie Moffit and Frank Lewery were ‘sniping’ around the gulch making a good living and
wondering if the palmy days of ’66 would ever return. After
a twenty-seven-year sleep rich quartz mines are being discovered,
hundreds of busy prospectors swarm through the
hills and
the old
gulch has
taken on
life anew.”
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The huge Diamond Hill Stamp Mill was operating at full
capacity by 1898. The town once had 200 people, several
businesses, a masonic lodge and many miners’ homes. $5
million in gold was reportedly taken from the mining district.
By 1910, most mining in the town had ceased and folks
had moved on.
Great Falls Daily Tribune– March 17, 1920
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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 P a g e 7
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
In celebration of Easter...
Masons have been a dynamic
force in Montana since early
territorial days, playing key
roles in events that shaped the
state’s history. Helena Masons
first came together in 1865 for
the funeral of Dr. L. Rodney
Pococke, for whom Rodney
Street was named. The fraternal organization has since
been closely intertwined with the Helena community.
The Masons acquired the former Ming Opera House in
1912. Built by John Ming in 1880 and renowned throughout the Pacific Northwest, the theater followed a
circular plan model after fashionable European opera houses. It featured thirty-two sets of elaborate scenery,
seating for 900, gas lighting in the house, and state-of-the-art stage lighting which included twenty-six
movable border lights. Rubber tubing delivered gas to the house and stage lights from a plant in the stone
cellar. The Ming hosted such famous performers as Otis Skinner, Eddie Foy, Marie Dressler, and Katie Putnam.
Patrons’ safety was not a consideration until 1887. John Ming renovated the opera house after 100
people literally roasted alive in an opera house fire in Exeter, England.
Ming added ample exits and updated the gas lighting system.
Ming Opera House, left, 1898. Montana Historical Society
Photograph Archives, 953-833
Photo Courtesy of Montana Moments Blog
In the early 1900s, the Ming hosted the first silent movies. In 1915, noted
Helena architects George Carsley and C. S. Haire redesigned the
building, transforming the theater into a more functional, modern auditorium.
Under the Masons’ care, the original hand painted 1880s scenery
remains in occasional use. For the past sixty-three years, the Scottish
Rite of the Freemasons have performed an Easter Tableaux, reenacting
scenes from the Last Supper to the Ascension. The free performance
utilizes the historic 1880s scenery and is the only time the public can
view these exquisite remnants of 1880s Helena. The landmark building
at 15 North Jackson in Helena survives thanks to the Masons’ stewardship
and continues to serve as a meeting place for members of all the
Masonic orders. –Ellen Baumler
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
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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
Wagner Cabin
This old log cabin was the first home of Joseph Wagner
and his wife Mary Elizabeth. It was built in the
early 1870s and stood on the original Wagner homestead
claim one mile north of Florence and just east
of the old highway from Missoula.
Joseph Wagner arrived from Germany in 1867 and
was soon joined by his brothers Sebastian and Isadore.
He came to Montana in 1869, settling first in Helena. All three brothers homesteaded in the Bitterroot
Valley near Florence in the 1870s, and lived in the area on adjacent farms for many decades.
This cabin is typical of log construction of the time and the
area. Other homestead cabins still exist, finding new life
as storage buildings and the like. The logs were originally
sealed with local clay, which has now been replaced by a
more stable mortar. The logs are undoubtedly hand hewn
Ponderosa Pine, harvested in the valley.
The Wagner property remained in the family until February,
1958, when Mr. and Mrs. Marion Davis purchased it.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
They eventually donated the cabin to the Stevensville Historical Society and it was moved to Fort Owen
in 1973. When it arrived at the Fort, it was floorless and had a rough partition separating the areas right
and left of the door. The roof was replaced with board and batten construction and the windows were
reinstalled.
The Wagner cabin is representative of a type of cabin that was found throughout the Bitterroot Valley in
the late 19th and early 20th century.
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׉	 7cassandra://mCIak5QrWWgWCQKeDYcoCNboNecUB1FApPBgWUrgjHI'` aZpvpXJ׈EaZpvpXJaZpvpXJ(, &Ghost Towns & History of MT- Mar. 2021 OGreat stories and photos about the history, ghost towns and people of Montana! aZprfrJ£X