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Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
From The Harlem News, May 11, 1934
RIVER OF GOLD
In July 1863, hard rock gold
was discovered nearly eight
miles above Virginia City and
the town of Summit soon
grew. By fall of 1863, an estimated
10,000 people were
living in Alder Gulch and the
towns of Junction, Adobetown,
Nevada City, Central
City, Virginia City, Highland, Pine Grove, and Summit formed a nearly continuous
settlement eleven miles long.
Through the later 1860's placer claims were consolidated and hydraulicking
began to replace shaft and drift placer operations. A complex and expensive
system of dams and ditches brought water from the mountains to hydraulic
mines near Nevada City. High up Alder Gulch, several lucrative hard
rock mines operated stamp mills. Four Chilean mills brought at tremendous
labor over the Bozeman trail operated at Union City. But the hard rock gold
was richest near the surface, and ore values lessened as the shafts deepened.
After the territorial capital moved to Helena in 1875, Virginia City
slowly lost population. Hydraulic mining and several large hard rock mines
continued to operate into the early 1890's.
In 1897, The Conrey Placer Mining Co. began using the new placer mining
technology of dredging. Four huge dredges were eventually built and the
installation of high voltage power lines, brought in to power the dredges,
made electrical history in Alder Gulch. Dredging continued into the 1930s.
At the beginning of World War II, however, gold was declared a
"nonessential mineral", and dynamiting was discontinued.
Accessed via: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Photo Courtesy of the MT Heritage Commission
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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
While a few small placer and hard rock operations
continue even today, Virginia City's economy has
depended upon tourism since the beginning of the
Bovey's restoration efforts in the 1940s. The area
near Virginia and Nevada Cities in Alder Gulch held
the richest placer gold deposits in Montana, and
some say richer than anywhere else on Earth. According
to research done in the 1920s, over one
hundred million dollars worth of gold had been removed from the gulch. At today’s prices, Alder
Gulch has yielded something closer to two and a half billion
dollars worth of gold! -Courtesy of the Montana Heritage
Commission
The River of Gold Mining exhibit and gold panning experience
is a tribute to the gold rush days in Alder Gulch. It is
located at 1559 MT Hwy 287 between Virginia City and
Nevada City. Look for the big mining dredge on the west
side of the road. For more information call 406-843-5247
or visit: https://virginiacitymt.com/
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The Old Lexington Stamp Mill was
Butte's first stamp mill. It began as a five stamp
mill and was erected by Charles Hendrie in
1867. A stamp mill is an ore crushing machine
that pounds rock into fine sand. Soon after the
mill's construction, Hendrie left Butte and never
returned. A.J. Davis held the lien on the property
and took over the mill. It laid idle for 9 years until a process to extract the minerals out
of Butte's complex compounds was discovered. Because of the newly discovered metal
extraction process, the mill was enlarged to ten stamps, and first blew it's work whistle on
January 23, 1877. Eventually enlarged to a twenty stamp mill, it operated around the
clock until Davis' death in 1890. In 1881 Davis sold the mill along with The Lexington
Mine to a French Syndicate for $1 million (about $15 million in today's money). This was
the largest transaction in Butte up to that time. Eventually, the mill processed about $45
million of wealth in today's money. –Courtesy of Interpretive Sign at Site
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
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P 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
Historic Mining on the Helena National Forest
In the 1860’s, miners combed the mountains of
southwestern Montana for gold, silver and other
precious metals. Their simple pick, shovel and pan
technology soon gave way to more aggressive hydraulic
mining involving water, ditches, flumes and
hoses. Gold mixed in stream (placer) deposits was
washed free of gravel and sand, and collected in
rocker and sluice boxes. Entire streambeds became
fields of waste rock. The economic trade-off
was millions of dollars worth of gold and precious metal. Colorful but short-lived mining camps
sprang up in mountain gulches surrounding the diggings. Abandoned mining camps were washed
away by subsequent placer and dredge mining or became ghost towns.
When the rich placers played out in the 1870’s, the search for the “mother lode” began. This hailed
the advent of hardrock lode mining and laid the economic foundation of many Montana communities.
Lode mining involves excavating and processing of an ore body in order to free the gold and
other precious metals embedded in its matrix. Once hauled from underground tunnels, the ore was
crushed in stamp and ball mills. The crushed ore concentrate was transported to smelters in Anaconda,
East Helena and far away Wales for final processing. Lode mines were dirty, noisy and
dangerous places to work.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
By the turn of the 20th century, lode mines of varying scale and fortune operated throughout southwestern
Montana. Especially productive mines produced millions of dollars worth of precious metals.
Flotation cell technology became the economic salvation of mining in Montana and the West in
the late 1920’s. It allowed the mining of low-grade ore bodies after the richer deposits were exhausted.
During the Great Depression, some mines remained solvent while others were operated
at a subsistence level or went belly-up.
World War II gave the mining industry a much-needed economic boost. The machinery of modern
warfare depended on metal. In 1943, the Government passed an order that closed all mines not
engaged in the production of strategic metals such as lead, copper, and zinc. This wartime order
and ensuing economic speculation led to a period of unparalleled productivity at many southwestern
Montana mines.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
In the 1950’s, mining in the West changed. Open-pit
mining was more cost efficient and safer. Ore concentrating
and processing technology evolved. Corporate
capital was needed to keep operations afloat. Most
small corporate and family mining operations could
not compete. Many are now historic mining ruins. –
Courtesy of https://www.fs.usda.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
Early Montana Pioneers: The Story of William & Clara Dalton, and their daughter
Matilda Dalton –Continued
Main street of Virginia City in the early 1860s.
On To Virginia City
In May of 1863, gold was struck at Alder Gulch,
about 80 miles east of Bannack. This discovery
changed the course of history not only for Montana,
but also for the Daltons. As did many of the
residents of Bannack, the Daltons “followed the
gold” and quickly moved to Alder Gulch, where
the brand new mining camp by the name of Virginia City awaited them.
History was unfolding, but of course no one at the time was aware of it or even thought about it. They were
simply chasing their dreams for a better life. And as one might expect, Virginia City immediately became a
classic Old West gold rush town just as Bannack did, with all that comes with that: miners, merchants,
blacksmiths, missionaries, gamblers, gunfighters, claim jumpers, ladies of the night... and of course murderers
and thieves. Gunfights were a daily occurrence in the middle of main street, and thieves were busy robbing
and killing innocent people of their gold.
Sheriff Henry Plummer and “The Innocents”
The acting sheriff of Virginia City was reportedly very meek, quiet and ineffective in curbing the lawlessness.
Then in May of 1863, a charming, well-refined 27 year old New England man glowing with charisma
by the name of Henry Plummer, road into Virginia City via California, and quickly stepped in as the new
sheriff of Virginia City. Soon after Henry Plummer became sheriff, the town of Virginia City as well as the
stagecoach road between Virginia City and Bannack, became terrorized by a ruthless gang of road agents
who called themselves “The Innocents”. They were responsible for over 100 murders in a single year
(1863) as they robbed people of their gold.
William Dalton’s Encounter With Henry Plummer on Virginia City's Main Street
Matilda Dalton recalls that her father William was walking across the street of Virginia City in the fall of
1863, and encountered Sheriff Henry Plummer. William and his family lived next to the Plummer Farm
near Portage City, Wisconsin for 8 years and were not only neighbors but were also friends of the Plummer
Family. Henry was just a boy at the time and William remembered him well. On the main street of Virginia
City, William spoke to Plummer and talked of their neighboring family farms near Portage City, Wisconsin.
Plummer immediately denied knowing William and claimed he had never lived in Wisconsin. Matilda recalled
that at dinner that night, her father William told the family that he was completely puzzled why
Plummer denied knowing him and why he claimed he’d never lived in Wisconsin. William was 100% pos׉	 7cassandra://W8srz3FApDD6BU2rlA_gPvqQNG-4vS6F-I4Re0spk0Q(` f1Vq,PD}׉E
P a g e 5
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
itive this was the Henry Plummer from Portage City. It was later discovered that William was correct…
Vigilante Justice
The Vigilantes of Virginia City and Bannack swiftly put an end to the lawlessness by taking the law into their
own hands. After over 100 people had been robbed and murdered during the last year, Nathanial P. Langford
and a host of other Freemasons, secretly formed
what was known as “The Vigilance Committee” in Virginia
City. On December 22, 1863, these Freemasons took a
formal oath, and began “cleaning up” the town. (It is not
known if William Dalton was a member of the Vigilance
Committee, as he was indeed a Freemason by this
time.) In just the first two months following taking this
oath, the Vigilance Committee hanged 24 men.
Soon after William Dalton spoke with Plummer on the
main street of Virginia City in the late fall of 1863, where
Plummer denied knowing William and denied ever living
in Wisconsin, it was discovered that Henry Plummer was
not the “good sheriff” everyone thought he was. Several days before the January 13, 1864 hanging of Frank
Parish, Boone Helm, Jack Gallagher, Haze Lyons and George Lane (Clubfoot George) on the main street of
Virginia City in an unfinished, open-beamed building, the Montana Vigilantes hit “pay dirt”.
While sitting in a jail cell, Clubfoot George ratted out
his accomplices with the hope of avoiding being
hanged. Clubfoot George's accomplices then ratted
out Henry Plummer as the secret leader of “The Innocents”.
Plummer and his deputies were quickly arrested
and hanged on January 10, 1864 in Bannack,
on the gallows that Henry Plummer himself ordered
to be built prior to being caught. (By the way, of all
the road agents who were hanged in Virginia City and
Bannack, it was reported that Plummer was the only
man who cried and begged for his life.) It was also
learned that Plummer was wanted for the murder of
his business partner John Vedder in California years
earlier and was hiding from his past in the Territory of
Montana. Following these January hangings, the rest
This wagon and blacksmith shop was where the Vigilantes
would hold their secret meetings in 1863 and
1864 on the main street of Virginia City. This building
still stands today.
This is the building where Frank Parish, Boone Helm,
Jack Gallagher, Haze Lyons and George Lane (Clubfoot
George) were hanged on January 13, 1864. This building,
known as "The Hangman's Building", still stands on the
main street of Virginia City, and the rope marks on the
support beam from which they were hanged are still visible.
of
the road agents who didn’t die at the end of a rope, fled the area, never to be seen or heard from again.
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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
Typhoid Fever Outbreak: The Deaths of William
and Clara Dalton
During the exact same time as the January 1864
hangings, Matilda at the age of 19, contracted typhoid
fever as did many of the residents of the Virginia
City gold camp. Many people died, but Matilda
survived. William and Clara cared for Matilda
during her illness, where they both contracted typhoid
fever and died within 2 weeks of each other
in January of 1864. They were buried beside each other in the Virginia City cemetery that was located on
a hill directly above the town. As earlier stated, according to Matilda Dalton, William Dalton’s funeral was
the second Masonic funeral in the Territory of Montana. The first Masonic funeral was that of William H.
Bell, who died in the fall of 1862 in Bannack Montana of “mountain fever”, which was actually typhoid
fever.
Road Agents and Boot Hill
Henry Plummer, the sheriff of Virginia City, and the secret leader
of the road agent gang known as "The Innocents".
The Boot Hill grave markers of the 5 road agents who were
hanged on January 13,1864 on the main street of Virginia
City. Their names are Frank Parish, Boone Helm, Jack Gallagher,
Haze Lyons and George Lane, a.k.a. Clubfoot
George. The Daltons' graves are located just to the left of
these road agents' graves.
Days after William and Clara’s death, following
the hanging of Helm, Lane, Gallagher, Parrish and
Lyon in that unfinished building on the main
street of Virginia City on January 13, 1864, the
Vigilantes buried these road agents in unmarked
graves in the Virginia City Cemetery with their
boots on, right next to Clara and William Dalton’s
graves.
Several years later, the residents of Virginia City
felt that they did not want their relatives buried
next to notorious Road Agents, so they moved
their relatives’ graves to another location above
Virginia City. The only residents left behind were
William and Clara Dalton, because there were no family members present to move their grave site. So for
over 110+ years, William and Clara Dalton laid next to the Road Agents graves on what became known as
“Boot Hill”.
For many years, most visitors to Boot Hill did not know why the Daltons were buried along side murderers.
Most visitors simply assumed that the Daltons were road agents just like the others buried
there. This bothered my Mother, Doris Jeanne Thibadeau Biegel and her sister Noreen Thibadeau Swanz
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׉E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
(Matilda Dalton’s great granddaughters) to no
end. So my mother and aunt, both of Harlowton,
Montana, contacted the Montana Historical Society,
and together erected an interpretive sign exGrave
site of William and Clara Dalton on Boot Hill in Virginia
City Montana, with the interpretive sign telling their story.
David's mother and aunt were an integral part of getting
this sign erected.
Interpretive sign by William and Clara Dalton's grave
telling their story.
plaining the Daltons’ story.
This all happened in the late 1970’s, and my mother and
aunt were very proud of being an integral part of this
project. Both my mother Doris Jeanne Thibadeau Biegel
and my aunt Noreen Thibadeau Swanz (who have both since passed) are official members of “Sons and
Daughters of Montana Pioneers”, and were extremely proud of her deep Montana pioneer heritage to
the day they died. Below is my mother’s certificate....
My mother's Certificate of Membership of the Sons and
Daughters of Montana Pioneers.
William and Clara's gravesite on Boot Hill, overlooking Virginia
City.
Matilda Marries Count Zebulon Bonaparte Thibadeau
Following the death of William and Clara Dalton in January of 1864, Matilda was left with three younger
siblings to care for, which was a near impossible task for a young 19 year old girl in a wild gold rush
town. However Matilda was not just any 19 year old girl... -Be sure to catch our next newsletter for the
conclusion of the Dalton story! A big Thank You to David and Shannon Biegel at
www.enjoyyourparks.com for sharing their amazing family history with us!
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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
Pictograph Cave Cannibals
English professor H. Melville Sayre of the Montana
School of Mines at Butte led the first archaeological
excavations at Pictograph Cave, a
National Historic Landmark, near Billings. Under
foreman Oscar T. Lewis, a Glendive rancher
and self-taught archaeologist, the dig was funded
by the Depression-era New Deal Works Progress
Administration of the 1930s. It put numerous
crew members to work. According to locals
who frequented the excavation site as visitors in
1937 and 1938, both Sayre and Lewis told fantastic tales. They claimed to have found evidence that Ice Age
occupants practiced cannibalism. They backed up their story with the supposed discovery of human teeth, a
human skull with knife marks consistent with removal of the tongue, and butchered human rib bones bearing
human teeth marks. While Sayre’s formal report to Governor Roy Ayers is considerably less flamboyant,
he does mention that some items yielded evidence consistent with cannibalistic activity. Lewis further
speculates in his notes that notched bone projectile points found in the caves came from Inuits in the Arctic.
He figured that the Inuits harpooned buffalo that did not die, but migrated south where they were eventually
killed by the early inhabitants of the Yellowstone Valley. Writer Glendolin Damon Wagner, who wrote
about evidence of cannibalism among other indigenous peoples, painted a vivid picture of the finds in Pictograph
Cave in the Rocky Mountain Husbandman of May 3, 1938. But when professional archaeologist Dr.
William Mulloy took over the Pictograph Cave excavations in 1941, these tales died a swift death. If evidence
of cannibalism existed, it has been lost along with many of the artifacts discovered under Lewis and
Sayre. Most scientists discount cannibalism among Montana’s first peoples as nothing more than bunk. -
Ellen Baumler
Bill Browne, photographer, Montana Historical Society Photograph Archives, PAc 90-96 P3 #18
Archaeologists Gus Helbronner (left) and Wahle Phelan during excavation
of Pictograph Cave, c. 1937
Ellen Baumler was 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. The legacy she left behind will be felt for generations to come and we are in debt to her for
sharing her extensive knowledge of Montana history in such an entertaining manner. To view and purchase Ellen’s books, visit: http://
ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/p/my-books.html
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