׉?4ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1uyMgLVagSikFnlqdkOJeAG6AfRtfUTf9r2W_nCfYPE $`׉	 7cassandra://VziQXg6xSADJXmQsa1dsAem4Cu7orHedURCWb63xNiE͇,`s׉	 7cassandra://kTbDkFw4DXmpjN4puyNonE28sIhK5bcW1PplyTm2sQM)` ׉	 7cassandra://-4QtMSdiZAdoS3S0J65iJlTJ6Fd5vwDMQw9-HorX23s b͠]aZq`pXJט   (u׈   frJ  נaZq`pXJ ̒
9ׁH  http://www.montananewspapers.orgׁׁЈנaZq`pXJ *79ׁHhttp://NPS.govׁׁЈ׈EaZq`pXJ׉EEOCTOBER 2021
Ghost Towns and History of
Montana Newsletter
From the Big Timber Pioneer
Oct. 24, 1929
G R A N T - K O H R S R A N C H
"They were a rugged set of men, these pioneers, well qualified for their selfassumed
task.
In the
pursuit of
wealth a few
succeeded
and the majority
failed,...the
range
cattle
industry has
seen its inception, zenith, and partial extinction all within a half-century. The
changes of the past have been many; those of the future may be of even
more revolutionary character." Conrad Kohrs, 1913
Dreams of wealth lured the first cattle men to Montana. The range was
open and unfenced, and they could fatten their cattle on the lush
bunchgrass and push on to new pastures when the old areas were overgrazed.
The main obstacles were buffalo and the Indians, and by the 1860's
both were fast being overcome.
Photo Courtesy of NPS.gov
Many of the herds were built through trade with westward-bound emigrants,
who gladly swapped two or more trail-worn cows for a single wellfed
one. In the late 1870's cowboys drove herds of rangy longhorns up from
Texas to the better grazing lands of Montana, adding a Spanish strain to the
English shorthorn breeds already established there and greatly multiplying
the herds.
By 1885, cattle raising was the biggest industry on the High Plains, and
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
foreign investors and eastern speculators
rushed to get in on the bonanza.
As ranches multiplied and the
northern herds grew, there came a
predictable consequence: overgrazing.
This and the fierce winter of 1886
-87 caused enormous losses, estimated
at one-third to one-half of all the
cattle on the northern plains. Many
cattlemen never recovered.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
If the snows of '86-87 foreshadowed
the end of open range
ranching, the homesteaders, with
their barbed wire and fenced-in
160 acre claims, finished it off.
Photo by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
The open-range cattle industry
lasted only three decades. Few of
its pioneering men and women
made their fortunes or are remembered
today. But from their beginnings
has evolved the more scientific
ranching of today, with its own risks and uncertainties. That is the legacy of the Grants and the
Kohrs, whose pioneer ranch, complete with original furnishings, is a reminder of an important chapter
in the history of the West. –Courtesy of National Park Service, to learn more visit: https://
www.nps.gov/grko/index.htm
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
HALLOWE'EN OBSERVED BY MISCHIEF MAKERS
Nov. 3, 1910- There was just about the usual number of useless, crazy stunts pulled
off by the youngsters of Virginia City Hallowe'en night as were pulled off in other
sections of the country. The only difference is that because Virginia City is smaller
there was less damage done than in other communities Anyway, there was no necessity
for half of the wild stunts pulled off and there was none of the victims who
enjoyed it. Just why the young folks can have unlicensed privilege to destroy other
people's property one night in the year has never been explained. And this complaint
is not leveled at any town in particular, and surely not against Virginia City.
People who got up early enough in the morning found a wagon on the schoolhouse
steps. Where it came from was unknown for a while, but finally an owner came along and claimed
the rig with a considerable amount of profanity and gusto. That, was rather tame in comparison with
a stunt which some of the pioneer pupils pulled off on a Hallowe'en night many years ago—it, was
the first one after the present schoolhouse was built. The night was freezing cold and they secured a
ladder, carried two or three buckets full of water into the cupola of the school-house, turned the bell
upside down and filled it with water. Naturally it froze solid, almost, but fortunately did not expand
sufficiently to crack the bell. The teacher
used to ring the bell himself, never depending
upon the janitor to do the work, but
there was no bell rang that morning and
there were few pupils on hand. Many had
helped to fill that bell with water and none
attended unless he heard the first bell to
call him to school.
Virginia City School, MT– 1919
Source: Pac 97.29-2 Montana Historical Society Photos
But that is ancient history. The pranks of
the other night were along mischievous
lines, many of them. One fence was torn
down for a number of rods just because it
looked easy to tear down. At another place
a gate was carried away and the owner is
still looking for it. Wandering cows came into a well kept lawn during the night and tore down vines,
uprooted plants and berry bushes which had required years to grow. That is only one of the instances
of malicious mischief that was practiced.
No one wants to accuse the mischief makers of wanting to wantonly destroy property, but there
should be a line drawn between meanness and fun. The bunch out Saturday and Sunday night, or at
least a part of it, did not consider that any one else in the town had any rights except their own
members and their ambition was to see just how much cussedness they could kick up within the
shortest possible period of time. -The Madisonian Newspaper (Virginia City, MT), Accessed via:
www.montananewspapers.org
׉	 7cassandra://-5DnoJMgGOZx_Pu6p0F_vxyf7rs0eKk7n133HsxSODs*` aZq`pXJaZq`pXJ(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://RV2ckxKAZRoujCjcjHVCr3wduGXjLb_IfQMF5nLRNsY `׉	 7cassandra://m9FNzfSpT4pYV7yMrNbsScKefXL2B9FsnY_yT9PH8k0͖`s׉	 7cassandra://szA8zWB9e4t22-bjPzMOgL6KpYSKHAu4PEoRMO9BNOc*` ׉	 7cassandra://A_-vg2qiNVGd15dQieEMEnJiJNvT3V_osYPKQipa3X8 2͠]aZqapXJט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://CNMhXrFVocULKC_vob1-w8yU1LEj3oXZfsFG2zShSVM X` ׉	 7cassandra://KovO42N-IXpKk97fnA8rij4WOxo20CRs8PwbC3epwtw͋S`s׉	 7cassandra://F3ddfO0XH24zJ0n67gYLR20r9DYq7k01NAWgi_IGwuc'` ׉	 7cassandra://CqrScU1Z8EVJ3R86iZ-53yuelrPb41xJtjVX57RlBTE Ԫ͠]aZqapXJנaZqapXJ Cl 9׉H >https://ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/2013/03/josephine-doody.htmlGׁׁrנaZqapXJ ?9׉H 0http://ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/p/my-books.htmlGׁׁrנaZqapXJ Di̳9׉H 8https://ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/2014/09/labor-day.htmlGׁׁrנaZqapXJ Ď9׉H 8https://ellenbaumler.blogspot.com/2014/09/labor-day.htmlGׁׁrנaZqapXJ ̍9׉H Shttp://buttehistory.blogspot.com/2012/03/before-hennessey-there-was-centennial.htmlGׁׁrנaZqapXJ G+̡9׉H ~https://www.amazon.com/WHAT-THINGS-ARE-MADE-Dependency/dp/1609107640/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1617329882&sr=1-1GׁׁrנaZqapXJ ]=@9׉H Fhttps://www.amazon.com/Lost-Butte-Montana-Richard-Gibson/dp/1609495942GׁׁrנaZqapXJ Da9׉H !http://buttehistory.blogspot.com/GׁׁrנaZqapXJ Dz+9׉H 'http://butte-anacondanhld.blogspot.com/GׁׁrנaZqapXJ Dy9׉H 5https://www.verdigrisproject.org/butte-americas-storyGׁׁrנaZqbpXJ Du9ׁH &https://www.verdigrisproject.org/butteׁׁЈנaZqbpXJ D9ׁH 'http://butte-anacondanhld.blogspot.com/ׁׁЈנaZqbpXJ De9ׁH !http://buttehistory.blogspot.com/ׁׁЈ׉EwP 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
Josephine Doody
Josephine Doody, Courtesy of Glacier National Park
On the way to isolated Harrison Lake, in the wilderness
area on the southern border of Glacier National
Park, lie the ruins of a secret cabin. The area is
extremely difficult to access because you have to
cross the Middle Fork of the Flathead and there is
only a short time when it’s not frozen or deep. The
remote cabin was home to Josephine Doody, a
woman even more notorious than Calamity Jane.
And unlike Calamity, the events of her life are not
disputed. John Fraley, in his book Wild River Pioneers,
details Josephine’s adventures. Around
1890. Josephine shot a man in Colorado, she
claimed in self-defense. Awaiting trial, she fled to
MacCarthyville, Montana, a railroad town along
James J. Hill’s Great Northern Railway. There,
as a dance hall girl, she met Dan Doody who fell
for her. But Josephine had an opium addiction.
So Dan kidnapped her, tied her to a mule, took
her to his homestead on the Flathead River and locked her in to dry out.
Josephine survived and took up moonshining. Dan kept a
tiny cabin where she could hide when the revenue officers
of Colorado lawmen came looking for her. James Hill built
a siding to the Doody place, and the engineer would blow
the whistle once for each quart of moonshine the engineers
wanted. Dan was one of the first park rangers at
Glacier, but was soon fired because he liked to poach the
game.
Photo Courtesy of Glacier National Park
Dan Doody, Courtesy of Glacier National Park
He died in 1919, and Josephine stayed in the two-story homestead, keeping guest rooms and leading
occasional fishing parties. She died in 1936 after a long, colorful life. –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
׉	 7cassandra://szA8zWB9e4t22-bjPzMOgL6KpYSKHAu4PEoRMO9BNOc*` aZq`pXJ׉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
Seven-Up Pete
Who was Seven-Up Pete? Peter McMahon was
part of the first party to discover gold in Silver
Bow Creek. The Anaconda Standard reported
(October 21, 1906) that it was Seven-Up Pete
who said the creek looked like a Silver Bow
glinting in the sunlight, and gave the name that
we continue to use to this day.
Pete was evidently a well-liked character around
Butte. When people asked how long he’d been in
Butte, he would say, “Do you see that butte over there? It was a hole in the ground when I came here.”
McMahon got his nickname playing the card game of seven-up back in Kansas, where he allegedly never
lost, except once, and that under threat of a club. He was born in County Clare, Ireland, June 29, 1833, and
came to America at age 16 in the wake of the Irish potato famine. He made his way from New York to New
Orleans to St. Louis, with, he said, 15 cents in his pocket, and he cut wood for his breakfast. He worked as a
riverman, railroad worker, and butcher, and as a scout in New Mexico for the army in the war against the
Comanches. He mined at Pike’s Peak, Colorado, before heading to Bannack and Virginia City in 1863.
When he and the Parker party (G.O. Humphreys, William Allison, Frank Ruff, Bud Parker, Peter Slater, and
perhaps others) came to what is now Butte, he said he found the first gold, running $1.65 to the pan—a
goodly sum in those days, enough to buy several days' or a week's lodgings or three or four nice dinners in a
restaurant. Pete also claimed to be the first to crush quartz for gold in Butte.
Pete McMahon was a miner who lived in the Centennial Hotel in 1885, and was presumably burned out
when it went up in flames in 1888. He worked as a carman [miners out there – what was that?] at the Green
Mountain Mine in 1891 but disappears from the directories beginning in 1893. –Richard Gibson
Sources: Butte Bystander, April 15, 1897; History of Montana, 1739-1885, by Michael A. Leeson.
Richard Gibson is a geologist. His career has ranged from analyzing kidney stones to 35 years in oil exploration. Butte's history, architecture, and
people captured his interest like he thought nothing could, and have expanded his life significantly. He’s still passionate about geology, but now
he’s passionate about Butte, too. His book "What Things Are Made Of" came out in March 2011; his writing blog focuses on it. The Butte History
blog contains interesting stories discovered in Butte, Montana, which are documented in "Lost Butte, Montana," from The History Press. Check
out more great stories from Richard by visiting his sites:
http://buttehistory.blogspot.com/
http://butte-anacondanhld.blogspot.com/
https://www.verdigrisproject.org/butte-americas-story
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P a g e 6
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 LEGEND OF HENRY PLUMMER
The story of Henry Plummer, the Road Agents and Vigilantes is
surrounded in myth and mystery. Some modern authors have
proposed that the sheriff was innocent of the crimes that he was
accused of and hanged for. Unfortunately, we will never know
the whole story. This version of the events that occurred here
was taken from the book “The Vigilantes of Montana” by Thomas
Dimsdale. Dimsdale was the editor of the Montana Post
newspaper in Virginia City and his account of the Vigilante
movement is still the primary source used by authors today
when researching the Vigilante activity of 1863.
Though true name or alias is disputed, Amos Henry Plummer is
an enigma in the Old West. In 1852, Henry Plummer resided in
Nevada City, CA where he served as local baker and city marshal. Five years later, he was
charged with second degree murder after shooting the husband of a woman he was involved
with. Plummer was sentenced to ten years in San Quentin. It was there that he met Cyrus
Skinner, who was doing time for grand larceny. Because of a supposedly “fatal illness,” Plummer
served only 6 months before returning to California. Plummer was in and out of law enforcement
for a couple years following, during which time he nearly killed one man and did kill
William Riley at a house of ill-repute on October 27, 1861. He was incarcerated, but escaped by
literally running out the door. He hid with friends in Carson City and then went to Idaho.
Plummer again became a wanted man after killing Patrick Ford. Plummer met up with his old
friends and ended up in Bannack, where he was appointed sheriff. He lived a public life of virtue
and generosity, marrying Electa Bryan, and even providing the first Thanksgiving dinner
in Bannack in 1863. After three months of marriage, Electa left for Cedar Rapids, Iowa where
her parents lived.
Henry Plummer was the leader of the Road Agents, also known as the “Innocents”. Their password
to identify each other was “I am innocent.” The Road Agents had spies and snitches in
many businesses and gold camps of southwest Montana. When they got word of a gold shipment
or a stagecoach passenger carrying large sums of money, they promptly relayed the information
to gang leaders. Such wealth seldom reached its destination. Plummer and his deputies
infiltrated every decent group and endeavor in the mining camps- except the Masons.
Plummer’s gang consisted of about 25 of the meanest roughs in the territory and reportedly
killed 102 prospectors between here and Virginia City during an 8-month period in 1863. They
stole millions of dollars worth of gold, which is still believed to be hidden in these hills…
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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 majority of people in the camps were hard-working, good people who grew increasingly
weary at the growing violence and open disdain
for law and order. After the robbery and
senseless brutal killing of Dutchman Nicholas
Tiebalt, Road Agent George Ives was tried by
a miner’s court in Nevada City. On Dec. 21,
1863, the first Vigilante action was taken
when they hanged George Ives by the neck.
Organizing quickly, the Vigilantes went to
work. In an early scouting party they met
Red Yeager, carrying with him correspondence
from Road Agent George Brown to the
Street in Bannack by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Skinner’s Saloon by Jolene Ewert-Hintz
Deer Lodge band. After capture and questioning,
Yeager named Plummer as chief of the band. Both
Brown and Yeager were hanged from a cottonwood
tree along the Ruby River. Things were getting hot
for the Road Agents. The Vigilantes knew they
were going to run and acted quickly. Late in the
evening of Jan. 9, 1864, Vigilantes from Alder
Gulch arrived in Bannack with news from the Virginia
City company and their request for cooperation.
The next day, three groups of Vigilantes individually
apprehended Henry Plummer and
his two deputies, Ned Ray and Buck Stinson.
The three companies met at the gallows built
by Plummer himself at dusk. While his partners
were hanging to die, Plummer begged
for his life and then stated that he was “too
wicked to die.” His last wish was granted,
and he was given a good drop. At the age of
27, Amos Henry Plummer died at the
Bannack gallows on January 10, 1864. –
Courtesy of the Bannack Association, to learn
more visit: http://bannack.org/bannackassociation
Bannack
Gallows 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
SOURDOUGH MINE- April 17, 1937- A new mining development project in the
Helena district is the work being
done by the Sourdough Mining
Co. at the Sourdough Mine, formerly
the Golden Curry Property,
near Elkhorn. This mine has been
a substantial producer of crude
pyritic gold ore, and is located
one mile west of the famous
Elkhorn silver property. The Sourdough
company acquired a
lease on the Sourdough property
in 1936, and the company has had a crew of men at work since last October. The main
tunnel of the mine has been opened up, and the company is now engaged in exploring
the property at depth by diamond drilling. Electric power is available at the mine,
and the drilling is being done with an electric diamond drill with capacity for deep drilling.
The
Sourdough property is owned by the Golden Curry Consolidated Mining Co. of Helena.
The lessee company is composed of Gust Carlson and various associates in Montana
and Minnesota. Lars Carlson is president of the Sourdough Co., and the mine work
is under the immediate direction of Gustaf Stenborg. -Accessed via: https://
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/
Sourdough Mine, 1937, Photographer Unknown, Courtesy of www.mtmemory.org
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