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9ׁH #https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ׁׁЈ׈EaZqNpXJJ׉ESEPTEMBER 2021
Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
From the Daily Yellowstone Journal
Sept. 3, 1885
M y s t e r i o u s M o n t a n a M a i d
Lizzie Borden took an axe,
Gave her mother 40 whacks.
When she saw what she had done,
She gave her father 41.
You may have heard this popular
rope jumping rhyme before, but
did you know that the Borden’s
maid, Bridget “Maggie” Sullivan
made her home in Montana not
long after serving as a key witness
in the murder trial?
It was a hot August morning in
1892 when the Borden’s would face a gruesome death in their home in
Fall River, Massachusetts.
For Bridget,
the Borden’s Irish
housekeeper, the
morning had started
like countless others.
Bridget rose early to
prepare breakfast for
the family. The meal
would be light on
The Borden family home in Fall River, Massachusetts, now a bed &
breakfast. (Credit: Chicago Tribune / Contributor/ Getty Images)
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
this particular day as the whole household had been suffering from intestinal
problems. Andrew Borden (Lizzie’s father) and house guest John
Morse (Lizzie’s uncle) left the family home around 9:00 am to conduct
business errands. Lizzie’s sister Emma was not home at this time as she
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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
was staying in nearby Fairhaven after a family dispute. According to Bridget’s testimony, Mrs. Borden
(Lizzie’s stepmother) had asked her to wash the windows inside and
outside as they were “awful dirty.” Bridget said she didn’t see Lizzie
about as she started to her task of cleaning the windows. Once outside,
Bridget stated that Lizzie asked her “Maggie, are you going to
wash the windows?” Bridget replied. “Yes. You needn’t lock the door;
I will be around here, but you can lock it if you want to; I can get water
in the barn.”
Bridget “Maggie” Sullivan
Not long after Mr. Borden arrived home, much earlier than his normal
schedule due to the recent illness he and his family were suffering
from. Bridget was still busying herself in and out of the house tending
to the windows. She testified that she let Mr. Borden in the house as
he had to ring the bell because the front door was locked by bolt from
the inside. Bridget also testified that she overheard Lizzie and Mr.
Borden’s conversation once inside. She heard Mr. Borden ask Lizzie where Abby (Mrs. Borden) was,
and Lizzie replied that she had gone out to visit a sick friend. Bridget then said that she too had felt
nauseated like the rest of the family, and she went outside to vomit. When she came back into the
house, she headed up to her room in the attic for a rest. She states this was about 10:55 am because
she heard the town’s bell ring at 11:00 am only a few moments later.
The next thing Bridget heard was Lizzie calling from downstairs, “Maggie, come down! Come down
quick; father’s dead, somebody come in and killed him.” Lizzie wouldn’t allow Bridget in the sitting
room to view the body, she instead sent her to retrieve the doctor. Dr. Bowen pronounced Mr. Borden
dead and requested a sheet to cover his body. Lizzie then asked Bridget to please go upstairs and check
on Mrs. Borden as Lizzie was sure she’d heard her come in. When Bridget entered the upstairs guest
bedroom, she found Abby Borden’s lifeless body.
Lizzie Borden was accused of murdering her father and stepmother after they were found hacked to
death. The Borden murder inquest began on August 9th and lasted for three days. It took the jury about
an hour and a half to come up with a not guilty verdict. Bridget Sullivan gave important testimony at
the hearing.
What really happened at the Borden residence on that fateful summer morn? Was Bridget involved
somehow? Did she help? Was she silenced by Lizzie? Was she paid off? Was she simply in the wrong
place at the wrong time? We may never know the answers to these questions, but we do know where
she would end up living out her days…Montana.
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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
It is believed that sometime after the trial, Bridget traveled back to Ireland but only stayed for a period of a
few months. She would end up in Anaconda, Montana sometime after 1896. By 1897 she was listed on the
census as a domestic worker. It has been documented that Bridget
served as the Winston’s longtime maid in their home on Main
Street. Alice and George Winston were some of the city’s first residents
to reside on Main Street south of the business district.
George Winston served as Anaconda’s first city attorney and clerk.
It seems as if Bridget had moved far enough away from her dark
days at Fall River to leave that recognition behind. Even some of
Bridget’s family in
later years were
Winston Home, photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
shocked to discover that their ancestor was that Bridget
Sullivan. In 1905 a marriage certificate was issued to Bridget
Sullivan and John Sullivan. They were married on June
21, 1905, at St. Paul’s Church and lived in various homes
throughout
the city before
purchasing
a home
of their own
on Alder
Street. John
was a jack of
many trades,
working as a
laborer, furnace man and smelterman. The couple never had
John and Bridget Sullivan at home on Alder Street.
Photo Courtesy of Naomi Sullivan
Old Sullivan Home on Alder Street.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
any children. Neighbors on Alder Street described Bridget as a kind and sweet woman. Family members remember
her as having been “tall, bent, and used a cane.” And, “strong-willed,” “liked her wine.”
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Bridget’s husband John passed away in 1939. She would move to Butte
just twenty-five miles away from Anaconda in 1942. Bridget was living
with her niece, Mary Sullivan (mother of Anaconda’s deputy sheriff,
Tim “Sox” Sullivan) on East Woolman Street before her death. She died
at the county hospital in Butte in March of 1948 from cardiac failure.
She is buried next to her husband in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Anaconda.
Did she take her secrets about the Borden case to the grave? Did
she have any secrets to keep??
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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
Rock Springs School- Memories of Lois Bain Angvick
From the 1st to 8th grade I went to school at
the Rock Springs School, West of Reserve,
MT. It was a three mile horseback ride from
our ranch.
Photo by Liselle Strassman
The Rock Springs School was your typical one
room country school that taught grades 1-8.
There was a barn for our horses and a teacherage
as well. The teachers I remember included
Mae Hark, Marie Summers and Anna
Walikonis. They taught us many things including music, singing and reciting poems.
I remember playing baseball in the spring and the boys pushing us girls too high in the swings. In the
winter months we brought soup to school in a pint jar and put the jars on the furnace to have warm
soup for lunch. To get water we walked down the hill with empty buckets to the Mork place, filled them
up and walked back to school uphill.
I also recall having pie socials at our school. A pie social is where the women prepare and decorate a
lunch basket which usually had fried chicken and a pie. The men had to bid on the baskets and whoever
bought the lunch basket got to have lunch with the
woman who prepared it.
My favorite memory of all was when my best friend
Rose Lossing and I raced horses at noon. We raced
down to where the road splits and back. It was
probably close to a one mile race. Half a mile down,
half a mile back. I won every time on my dads Appaloosa
mare named 'Appy.' It was fun until my dad
caught on. One Saturday morning he needed to use
the saddle horse and as soon as he got his foot in the
saddle she took off. He came into the house and
asked if I had been racing that mare and before I
could even answer he told me, "Don't even bother, I
know you have. I barely got my foot in the saddle and she took off!"
Article reprinted from our magazine, Ghost Towns of Montana and Beyond
Photos by Liselle Strassman at Abandoned Montana- Until They All Fall Down at: https://
www.facebook.com/Abandoned-Montana-Until-They-All-Fall-Down-672550499457568/
Photo by Liselle Strassman
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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
Labor Day
The late nineteenth century was a time of national
labor unrest when workers nation-wide protested
deplorable working conditions. Labor unions in
New York City celebrated the first Labor Day on
Tuesday, September 5, 1882. Ten thousand workers
took unpaid leave to march from City Square to
Union Hall. The idea caught on, and many states
followed New York’s lead. In 1891, Montana joined
nine other states whose legislatures had previously
designated the holiday: New York, Pennsylvania,
Connecticut, Colorado, Massachusetts, Nebraska,
New Jersey and Ohio.
On September 7, 1891, flowers looked their prettiest
and birds sang their sweetest when Montana
celebrated that first Labor Day. Deer Lodge was
the main center of celebration where people from all points gathered. They came from the country,
from outlying camps, and on the train from Butte. Seventeen rail cars dispatched some two thousand
visitors and two bands. They formed a procession and
marched to a pavilion prepared for the occasion. Hon. E. D.
Matts of Missoula, who authored the legislation making Labor
Day a state holiday, addressed the crowd. Other
speeches followed, filling two hours. The crowd listened intently.
At four o’clock, rail cars brought five hundred more
guests from Butte where all the labor organizations had
marched in a huge parade. Revelers quietly scattered,
some participating in races and games, others strolling the
grounds among the trees and quietly enjoying the holiday.
An evening of dancing brought the pleasant day to a close.
Several years later in 1894, President Grover Cleveland
signed legislation designating the first Monday in September
a federal holiday. Congress passed the Labor Day act
on the heels of a violent strike by employees of the American
Railway Union in Chicago. Federal troops were called
in and thirty-four workers lost their lives during vicious riots.
This photo by N. A. Forsyth, taken circa 1905, shows the
dangerous working conditions in Butte's mines that contributed
to labor strikes and unrest. Montana Historical
Society Photograph Archives, ST 001.168
Although President Cleveland was not favorable to unions, he signed the act in an attempt to mend
damaged ties with American workers.
While we celebrate the workingman’s holiday today more as a symbol of summer’s end and the
start of the school year, we should remember that it was a originally a workingman’s holiday born
of national unrest. –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
Early telephone operators often worked ten to twelve hour days for as little
as thirty dollars per month. In 1907, Butte operators struck and were granted
a minimum wage of fifty dollars per month, an eight-hour workday, and
a closed shop. These operators are working in Helena in 1906. Montana
Historical Society Photograph Archives, PAc 75-43 folder 23
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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
HISTORIC HEADLINESSeptember
30, 1910
NO. 2 SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY
Enrollment on First Day 150
Four Teachers Employed---School Census
Completed.
The school at Klein, Camp Two, opened
Monday morning with an enrollment of
150 pupils, the opening of school being
postponed one week on account of the new
addition to the school building not having
been completed. This school has experienced
a remarkable growth, and the outlook
at the beginning of its second year already
is that provisions will have to be
made for another addition or a new and
larger building next year. As it is the district has a very neat four room school building capable of
providing for 200 children which is a credit to Klein in every respect.
The teachers in charge of the school are Miss Kate Smith, of Billings, principal; Miss Fannie McGibboney,
of Kimberly. Mo., sixth and seventh grades; Miss Maud Griffin, of Roundup, fourth and fifth
grades; Miss Laura Dunn, of Roundup, primary grades. All the members of the faculty are experienced
teachers, and that the present term of school will be a very successful one is a foregone conclusion.
Most of the credit for the work accomplished in the Klein school district is due the school
board which has unceasingly labored for its welfare. The members of the board are J. L. Fisco,
chairman, F. A. Rehder and Geo. Olmstead. W. R. Pickens is clerk of the board. Clerk Pickens recently
completed the school census of his district which showed a total of 354 under the age of 21.
The state apportionment is based on these figures.- The Roundup Record Newspaper, Courtesy of
The Library of Congress
Photographic postcard of Klein, Montana. The No. 2 coal mine was located
near Klein. The Klein No. 2 Mine provided coal for the Milwaukee
Railroad for many years. The photographer was Corliss Fairchild who
had a studio at 209 First Street West in Roundup between the years of
approximately 1908-1925.- Courtesy of The Roundup Community Library
and The Montana Memory Project
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The land for Sumner School in Park
County was deeded by Fred Sumner in
1908. Heated by a coal stove, the school
year would start in October and continue
on as long as the funds were available to
pay the teacher. Spelling bees, Christmas
programs and the Pledge of Allegiance
would fill the school until it's closure in
1957.
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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
Elkhorn Mine and Coolidge Ghost Town- Located 6 miles off the Pioneer
Mountains National Scenic Byway,
the Elkhorn Mine was discovered on
October 24, 1873, by Mike Steel and
F.W. Panish. Bill Roe was said to
have given the mine it’s name as a
result of having found a pair of elk
horns in the area.
The mine was first opened and worked
by a company financed in the East.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Silver ore, which was the mine’s primary metal, was hauled by bull teams
as far as Corrine, Utah, where it was loaded on railroad cars and transported
to San Francisco. At San Francisco the ore was transferred to
ships sailing for Swansea, Wales, where it was treated and made into metal.
In
1911, Mr. William R, Allen had begun buying claims in the area and in
1913, he formed the Boston Montana Mining Company, who hired S. W. Hall
to come to the mine and examine the Elkhorn properties. Hall spent forty
days investigating the claims. Impressed, he urged the company to begin
operations which had every indication of a big return. At this time, the
seeds of Allen’s dream must have surely begun to form.
William R. Allen was born in French Gulch near Anaconda, Montana, in July
of 1871. He received his early education
in the Deer Lodge county school,
then attended the Helena Business
College, where he graduated with honors
in 1891. As a young man he was
employed by Marcus Daly in the early
development of the Anaconda smelter
and was in charge of Mr. Daly’s lumber
business. In 1893, Mr. Allen marPhoto
by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
ried Eliza Berkin, and they had four children together. Following his
wife’s death in 1917, Allen married Ethel Louise deMar, with whom he
raised three children. In 1902, Allen was elected to the legislature,
representing the Republican party from his county. He served in the capacity
until 1908, when he was elected lieutenant governor, serving in
this office under Governor Edwin L. Norris until 1913. When he retired
from politics, he decided to devote his time to raising money for the de׉	 7cassandra://rRLHjKMNGuB8t4mRevOAo6rJuDbchcnzQBawo25fh9E%` aZqNpXJYaZqNpXJX(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://kLwtuCjofW1HCEjIMAxSjfPZma7p-CMrWClNYnuOSlo `׉	 7cassandra://7nm39_UpS9Ntcfa-65KFl1etfm44sE5wH6y7SPLQyRczg`s׉	 7cassandra://aL1JffK9Z1NZA7GHJ1vK6qaCLOPg8zp4HVUedSXWPtE$` ׉	 7cassandra://yc88NXgamd3Gto8mfq0LlDKSXHLkfoSGcEzRWf3O2nA <͠]aZqPpXJyנaZqPpXJx 29׉H \http://www.fs.usda.gov/?fbclid=IwAR3uEXdQ5HjGvDp5QYKVQ1Bmqv6ye_rOxaxGDpRmK4MenRt0TY6XGmB0dZoGׁׁrנaZqPpXJ| 69ׁHhttp://www.fs.usda.govׁׁЈ׉EP a g e 8
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
velopment of Montana enterprises.
As early as 1914, the community of
Coolidge, named after W. R. Allen’s
friend Calvin Coolidge, had begun to
thrive and at this time work was just
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
beginning on the mine tunnel.
The town had both telephone service
and electricity provided by a power
line carrying 65,000 volts running
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
from Divide over the hill to Coolidge. The cost on completion was
$150,000. With more families moving
to Coolidge, a school district
was established in January
of 1922. In 1927, the school district
was abandoned and in 1932,
the post office was discontinued
and the mail was ordered to Wise
River.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Text courtesy of www.fs.usda.gov.
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An easy one mile walking trail
lets you discover and explore the
abandoned mining town of Coolidge.
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