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https://cskt.org/

https://cskt.org/

The Flathead Indian Reservation — home to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes — spans 1.3M acres in NW Montana. From the 1855 Hell Gate Treaty to the 2015 takeover of Kerr Dam, its history is one of resistance, adaptation, and enduring sovereignty […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Seen somewhere in the wilds of eastern Montana today, egg day 2026.

#WorldHistory
#USHistory
#MTHistory
#Montana
#History
#BSTS
#Fourosix
#MontanaToday
#histodons

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"Maclean teaching English 237, his popular course on Shakespeare, at the University of Chicago, January 1970. Photographs by Leslie Strauss Travis. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

"Maclean teaching English 237, his popular course on Shakespeare, at the University of Chicago, January 1970. Photographs by Leslie Strauss Travis. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Norman Maclean grew up in Missoula, fished the Blackfoot, and fought fires in the Bitterroots — then spent 46 years teaching at the University of Chicago before publishing his first book at 73. A River Runs Through It and Young Men and Fire made him one of […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Bison herd grazing at the National Bison Range, photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Bison herd grazing at the National Bison Range, photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Montana’s National Bison Range, established in 1908 to rescue a species on the edge of extinction, has a history as complex as the landscape it occupies — from a narrowly averted ecological catastrophe to a landmark transfer of federal land back to the […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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John “Liver-Eating” Johnston was considered one of the strongest mountain men to trap in the West as well as the most feared Western fur trapper because of his vendetta against the Crow Indians. Photo courtesy of truewestmagazine.com

John “Liver-Eating” Johnston was considered one of the strongest mountain men to trap in the West as well as the most feared Western fur trapper because of his vendetta against the Crow Indians. Photo courtesy of truewestmagazine.com

John “Liver-Eating” Johnston: Montana lawman, Civil War vet, Army scout — and subject of one of the West’s most outrageous legends. But how much is true? The real story is stranger, and more complicated, than any Hollywood myth.

Web […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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John Mix Stanley sketch of Fort Benton, 1853, photo courtesy of distinctlymontana.com

John Mix Stanley sketch of Fort Benton, 1853, photo courtesy of distinctlymontana.com

A lone stranger walked into Fort Benton in 1856 carrying a sack of gold — then vanished. Who was John Silverthorne, where did he find it, and why did Montana’s pioneers spend decades arguing over his secret?

Web […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Sam Kitzenberg

Sam Kitzenberg

The Legislator Who Crossed the Aisle: Sam Kitzenberg, a Glasgow, MT teacher-turned-Republican senator, served 14 years championing Hi-Line infrastructure, education, and the Fort Peck Fish Hatchery. In 2006 he switched parties, tipping Senate control to […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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John F. Kennedy Campaigns in Billings, September 25, 1963, less then 2 months before his assassination in Dallas, Texas.

John F. Kennedy Campaigns in Billings, September 25, 1963, less then 2 months before his assassination in Dallas, Texas.

17,000 Montanans packed the Yellowstone County Fairgrounds on Sept. 25, 1963, to hear President Kennedy speak on conservation and the newly ratified Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. It was his second Billings visit; the first came during his 1960 campaign. He was […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Two Moons (Credit: Northwestern University Library Edward S. Curtis's The North American Indian, 2003, photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Two Moons (Credit: Northwestern University Library Edward S. Curtis's The North American Indian, 2003, photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Chief Two Moon (1847–1917), Northern Cheyenne war leader at Little Bighorn, surrendered to the U.S. Army in 1877, helped establish the Tongue River Reservation, and spent decades as a diplomat advocating for his people. See link below for full article.

Web […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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From Oklahoma exile to sovereign Montana homeland: the Northern Cheyenne refused removal, won back their land, fought corporate coal giants, and built a college to keep their language alive. Their story is one of the most powerful acts of persistence in […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Maurice Hilleman (1919–2005), circa 1958, as Chief of the Dept. of Virus Diseases. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Maurice Hilleman (1919–2005), circa 1958, as Chief of the Dept. of Virus Diseases. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

From a Miles City farm to global medicine: Maurice Hilleman developed 40+ vaccines — including MMR and hepatitis B — saving an estimated 8 million lives annually. Montana’s greatest scientist remains one of history’s most impactful, least recognized figures […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Original post on mastodon.world

The Results are In... and the Winner is the Beer Car!

What a day! This past Tuesday, the Western Heritage Center officially held its Grand Re-opening, and the turnout was incredible despite the "breezy" Montana weather.

Web:
https://jdmotorforge.com/f/winner-winner-steak-dinner

#WorldHistory […]

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Bannack was founded in 1862 when John White discovered gold on Grasshopper Creek. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Bannack was founded in 1862 when John White discovered gold on Grasshopper Creek. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

In 1862, a Colorado prospector named John White found gold in a Montana creek, and the town of Bannack was born. Montana's first territorial capital, home to a controversial sheriff, vigilante justice, and over 60 preserved buildings, Bannack remains one of […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Nathaniel P. Langford abt. 1870. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Nathaniel P. Langford abt. 1870. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org

Langford shaped Montana’s territorial era as gold-rush entrepreneur, tax collector, vigilante, and Yellowstone’s first superintendent – a man driven equally by public vision and private ambition, whose legacy remains as complex as the frontier he helped define […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Stone cold wonder: A petrified man pulled from Montana’s Missouri River in 1897 was marketed as murdered Civil War governor Thomas Meagher. The exhibit toured nationally before fading into obscurity – and the figure has never been found.

Web […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Thomas Cruse, photo courtesy of mtmemory.org.

Thomas Cruse, photo courtesy of mtmemory.org.

From County Cavan to Montana millionaire, Thomas Cruse struck gold at the Drumlummon Mine, built a bank that survived the 1893 Panic, funded Helena’s Cathedral, and left a city transformed by immigrant grit and extraordinary generosity. For further reading see […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital, Glasgow, MT. Photo courtesy of KPAX TV via facebook.

Frances Mahon Deaconess Hospital, Glasgow, MT. Photo courtesy of KPAX TV via facebook.

The January 17, 2009 Glasgow, MT hospital parking lot shooting killed one woman and wounded two others. A six-hour manhunt ended with the gunman’s death. 106 responders were honored; eight officers received a White House Top Cops Award. For further reading see […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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A photo of Coates provided to Falcon Publishing for the biography, Honey Wine & Hunger Root, written in 1985 by Lee Rostad. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org.

A photo of Coates provided to Falcon Publishing for the biography, Honey Wine & Hunger Root, written in 1985 by Lee Rostad. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org.

From a Kansas wheat farm to the Montana frontier, Grace Stone Coates wrote poetry and fiction that captured the raw beauty and isolation of the West -- and earned a spot in John Updike's Best American Short Stories of the Century. Discover her remarkable […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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I guess fire season is now officially underway. Photos of the Panama Fire along the interstate near Cardwell today.

#WorldHistory
#USHistory
#MTHistory
#Montana
#History
#BSTS
#Fourosix
#MontanaToday
#histodons

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http://www.crow-nsn.gov/

http://www.crow-nsn.gov/

"Sovereign Ground" traces the Apsaalooke (Crow) people of Montana from their origins through treaty-era land loss, federal policy battles, and cultural endurance, highlighting key leaders and the tribe's ongoing sovereignty. See link below for further reading […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Original post on mastodon.world

Yellowstone’s Acidic Echinus Geyser Is Erupting Again For the First Time in Years

The eruptions began in early February. It’s unknown whether the eruptions will continue into the busy summer tourism season, but it’s a reminder that Yellowstone is an ever-changing, dynamic landscape.

Web […]

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Powell 'Pike' Landusky grave in Phillips County MT. Photo courtesy of findagrave.com

Powell 'Pike' Landusky grave in Phillips County MT. Photo courtesy of findagrave.com

Pike Landusky, a Missouri-born frontiersman, prospected gold in Montana’s Little Rockies, founding the town bearing his name. Killed in 1894 by outlaw Kid Curry, his discoveries shaped the region’s mining history and Indigenous land disputes for generations […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Copper Village Museum and Arts Center, photo courtesy of cvmac.org.

Copper Village Museum and Arts Center, photo courtesy of cvmac.org.

The Copper Village Museum in Anaconda, MT occupies an 1895 Victorian City Hall saved from demolition. Founded in 1971 by Sister Joeann Daley to heal post-strike community divisions, it now preserves the region’s copper industry history and fosters local arts […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Original post on mastodon.world

First grizzly of 2026 spring season spotted March 9 in Yellowstone’s northern backcountry, scavenging a bison carcass. Males emerge in early March; females with cubs in April–May. Visitors warned to carry bear spray and stay 100 yards away.

Web […]

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C.W. "Shorty" Young, photo courtesy of MSU-Northern.

C.W. "Shorty" Young, photo courtesy of MSU-Northern.

Shorty Young, a 5’2”, arrived penniless in Havre, MT in 1895 and built a frontier empire spanning saloons, gambling halls, brothels, underground tunnels, and a bootlegging operation along the Canadian border. He outmaneuvered law enforcement for decades […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Aaron Hedges, photo courtesy of montanarightnow.com.

Aaron Hedges, photo courtesy of montanarightnow.com.

Lost in the Crazies:
The Disappearance and Death of Aaron Joseph Hedges in the Crazy Mountains of Montana

INTRODUCTION

The Crazy Mountains of south-central Montana occupy a singular place in the landscape of the American West. Rising more than 7,000 feet […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Simon Pepin, photo courtesy of findagrave.com

Simon Pepin, photo courtesy of findagrave.com

Simon Pepin and the Making of Northern Montana:
Contractor, Cattleman, and Civic Architect

INTRODUCTION

The development of northern Montana during the latter half of the nineteenth century was the work of a relatively small number of individuals who arrived […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Original post on mastodon.world

FRANCOIS FINLAY (BENETSEE):
THE METIS TRAPPER WHO SET MONTANA'S GOLD ERA IN MOTION

INTRODUCTION

Among the many individuals who shaped the early history of what is now the state of Montana, few occupy a position more historically significant -- or more persistently overlooked -- than Francois […]

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Camp Keewaydin, bull rakes and beaverslide stacking hay. Photo courtesy of mtmemory.org.

Camp Keewaydin, bull rakes and beaverslide stacking hay. Photo courtesy of mtmemory.org.

THE BEAVERSLIDE HAY STACKER: INVENTION, DIFFUSION, AND ENDURANCE IN MONTANA RANCHING HISTORY

INTRODUCTION

Few agricultural implements reflect the particular pressures of Montana's ranching environment as distinctly as the beaverslide hay stacker. Emerging […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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Louis Riel, after a carte de visite from 1884. Photo courtesy wikipedia.org

Louis Riel, after a carte de visite from 1884. Photo courtesy wikipedia.org

Louis Riel and His Place in Montana History

INTRODUCTION

Louis Riel (1844-1885) occupies an unusual position in North American history. Revered in Canada as a founding father of Manitoba and a defender of Metis rights, he is simultaneously a figure whose […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]

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