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The goal of this blog is to help readers locate their lineage and discover the forces that motivated them, and learn how they lived their lives--told in their own words in the BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS trilogy, from the 1860s to the early 1930s. The indexed names will be published here frequently, along with an excerpt and a historical photograph if available. ** Scroll Archives at right.

Order Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III [.pdf editions on DVD] via email to mtscribbler [at] air-pipe [dot] com OR email: ooslegman [at] hotmail [dot] com

Thank you ~~ Mona Leeson Vanek ~aka~Montana Scribbler



Friday, April 11, 2014

Black Indian: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.3 No.1

Vignette Vol.3 No.1
[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]

McClung, Walt
Late 1920s. Noxon. Excerpt--After Walter Lake left forest service employment and moved to Noxon, Walt McClung was Ranger Benjamin F. "Ben" Saint's man at Bull River.

H.R. Bob Saint, Ben's son, said, "[Walt] McClung was a big, black Indian. Just as black as they come. His brother was great big man, too, only he was blonde and blue eyed. Their dad was full-blooded Irish and their mother was full-blooded Indian.

"He [Walt] built the road into the Heidleberg Mine with a pick and shovel and a box of powder. He worked for my dad for years and years. He was an excellent worker as long as he kept sober. He had the Indian trait that he could not handle liquor.

"Clyde Scheffler lived just above the Bull River Guard Station, right at the mouth almost, or just up on the East Fork of Bull River," Bob said.

"[Walt] McClung used to tell about when they came to town one time in the winter. They come in on the sled. And, of course, Scheffler got drunk. Walt said they started up the canyon [Bull River Valley]. 'My God,' McClung said, 'about every half mile Clyde would fall off the sled. And he'd lay there and yell until I'd stop and go back, pick him up and help him up on the sled.'

"Walt simply got tired of it after about four times. About the fifth time Clyde slipped off again and started yelling, Walt said he just took the axe off the front of the sled, you know, and went back and said, 'I might just as well kill the son-of-a-bitch here as anyplace'.

"Walt said, 'You know, Clyde got onto his feet and got onto the sled and no more problem until we got home.' It just tickled McClung to death."

Clark, Jack

1929. While building the first highway through western Sanders County, west of Trout Creek. Excerpt--Clifford R. Weare said, "Jack Clark's folks lived on the north side of the Clark's Fork River, in a big white house at the bottom of the hill on the mouth of Swamp Creek. When they were building the highway, Jack's dad got into a row with the state engineers. He didn't want them to go through his orchard. So he planted Mason jars of dynamite out there. Buried it." Years later, when Weare recounted the story, he laughed heartily. "Hahaha."

"When they plowed that first jar of dynamite out, they quit! Hahaha. Everybody got off Clark's land! He was an ornery old cuss. I knew him. That was as far as the road came west from Trout Creek for a long time, right there. They quit right there."


During the years residents pushed for a highway through western Sanders County, throughout the year, summer or winter, residents nearest the Montana\Idaho border, like these unidentified ladies, crossed from the south side to the north side of the Clark's Fork River in the traditional way, on the Heron ferry, courtesy Melvin Reginald collection.

Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]


PDF copies of Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
.
Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!
 
 

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Northern Pacific Railroad: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.1 No.5

Vignette Vol.1 No.5
[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]

A.A. Fairbairn
1883. Noxon. Excerpt--A.A. Fairbairn became the first depot agent at Noxon, occupying the depot's living quarters. Noxon - " ... that curious name which is spelled probably like no other city or town in the world" ... was named after a Mr. Noxon, who was chief Construction Engineer on the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1883. The tiny settlement was forming near the western border of a county nearly as large as the whole state of New York.



Susan B. Anthony
1883. Heron. Excerpt--"Among the three thousand people who have thus early found their way to the Coeur d'Alene mines, a large proportion are business men," the paper reported. "The 'girls' are here, too, and more of them come every day or two. Some of them dress stylishly and wear silks and diamonds. Some dress coarsely and slovenly. Quite a number wear men's clothes, and walk the streets in garments which would excite the envy of Susan B. Anthony."

Arrard, Henry
1908. Noxon. Excert--Henry Arrard was granted a saloon license at Noxon March 4, 1908. Women, determined to rear their children in a civilized environment, started the Union Sunday School. Mostly at the urging of the women, school trustee Shelton S. Brown convinced the other trustees to approve using the two-year old schoolhouse for Sunday school classes. The sports in the saloons nicknamed him "Sunday School" Brown. On the second Thursday of November the county newspaper reported Arrard opening the Blue Front Saloon, but the location is lost to history. Old timers say saloons were on the flats near the river so Arrard's may have been there.

Six weeks later, on December 30, 1908, the Northern Pacific Railroad's land commissioner reported to Howard Elliott, at NPRR headquarters in Minnesota. Elliott wrote: "I explained to you some time ago that the company owns all of the land at Noxon and that there has never been any town site platted there. A number of people have put up their buildings on our right of way. To relieve the embarrassment of the situation you authorized me to have a small town site platted there. Such has been done, and the plat is enclosed herewith, for execution. I have made the town site about as small as it is possible to do so, as there is no likelihood that there will ever be a town of any size at Noxon." As town sites go, it was very small, about a half-mile square.
Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]


PDF copies of  "Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III" are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
 
 Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!
 

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Company Store: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.1 No.4

Vignette Vol.1 No.4
[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]

Bob Anderson
1888. Noxon. Excerpt--"The population in Noxon included a few settlers, railroad section gangs, and men freighting supplies from the railroad spur at Smeads Landing through the Bull River Valley to the Kootenai River Valley where the Great Northern Railroad was being built.

There were two sawmills, Frank Lyons' and Greenough's. Bob Anderson planted his orchard by the river. The trees thrived in the clearing he'd wrested from the forest using brawn, and dawn-to-dark use of an axe, a grub hoe, dynamite, and a spring-though-fall fire."


Tom Stanton
1891 Smeads. Excerpt--"The community of Smeads prided itself on having 8 to 10 houses, a Company Store and two saloons. County commissioners at Missoula were persuaded on July 9th to license James Rutherford to operate a ferry across the Clark's Fork River at Smeads Spur, his pay $40 a month. A week later, on July 16, the commissioners gave the ferry license to Carson Rutherford & Company. Rutherford, who'd had the ferry license at Smeads, had lost it to Tom Stanton. But when Stanton got into the freighting business, he could no longer operate the ferry, so in September 1891, John Williams took it over. Williams gave up the dangerous occupation in January 1892, when heavy snowfall, or plunging temperature, challenged ferryman and passengers. B.S. Baker bought the barge-like affair, and took up transporting heaving loads across the Clark's Fork River. Contractors and freighters were hacking out a "tote road" from Smeads, roughly following the Old Daly Trail, north through the Bull River Valley toward Troy."

Lucy Allan
Noxon. Excerpt--In 1904, 6-year old Lucy Allan, the youngest of seven children, came with their parents. Their covered wagon was pulled right down the railroad line by four horses. Their mother rode in the covered carriage pulled by two horses. The Allans had met the Raynors while they'd all been stopped near Missoula. When they arrived at Noxon, they crossed to the north side of the Clark's Fork River on the ferry Griffin owned and operated. His property fronted the south side of the river, east of the NPRR depot.

The Allans camped on the Raynor's place in Soldier Gulch while they looked over the land. A short time later they went to the James Bauer place for a few days before moving on to Heron, where they located and stayed for twenty years. Mrs. Annie Allan served the town as mid-wife, while her husband, Fred, was a constable for many years.


Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]


PDF copies of  "Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III" are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
 
Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!
 

Condemnation Proceedings: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.1 No.3

Vignette Vol.1 No. 3
[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]
Judge W.C. Adam's 
Thompson Falls. Excerpt--"It was claimed he [Dr. Knapp] came across the state line from Idaho to Trout Creek to attend some cases of typhoid fever," the newspaper reported. Knapp was found guilty in Judge W.C. Adam's court, and fined $50.00. This affected all of the small towns in the west end of the county, since medical help was so scarce. Noxon had Mrs. George Buck, who it was rumored lacked only her surgical degree in medical training, before she came to Noxon. Dr. Peek was in Thompson Falls. Mrs. Annie Allan, at Heron, and Mrs. Stella Bauer, at Noxon, were midwives."

A.S. Ainsworth
Thompson Falls. Excerpt--"The Inter-State Power Company, represented by A.S. Ainsworth, began condemnation proceedings against John Pugh (and wife), J. Anna Kline, Lois Laffay (sic, LaFey), John and Lottie Colbert, W.J. Johnson and J.P. Olson to get land near Heron for the proposed dam. H.O. Bond, Esq., represented the people in District Court, 4th Judicial District, Sanders County. The power company won, and the court awarded Pugh $892.50; Laffay (sic LaFey) and Kline, $2,362.50; and Colberg, Johnson and Olson $246. These amounts were later reduced under appeal."


Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]



PDF copies of  "Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III" are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
.
Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!

Friday, April 4, 2014

Mines at Pritchard Idaho: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.1 No.2

Vignette Vol.1 No. 2
[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]

Davis, H. J. "Bony"

Northern Pacific Railroad Division Point and roundhouses at the first town of Trout Creek, Montana. Referred to as Tone City, and, later as Larchwood. Courtesy Edna Cox McCann collection.


Tone City. Excerpt--"In December 1883, Peter Tone and Josephus Hamilton each took up 80 acres of homestead at the NPRR station at the mouth of Trout Creek. They had 12 men working for them on a trail up Trout Creek, over the rugged passes, into Idaho.

"Downstream at Heron, H.J. "Bony" Davis and Fred Weeks were ahead of them. At a meeting in October they had raised $450 to build the new trail they had located from Heron to the mines at Pritchard, Idaho (30 miles) and Eagle City (20 miles).Heron now had four restaurants, seven saloons and the railroad division building. Andrew Johnson committed suicide. He laid on the railroad tracks and was run over. W.A. Shannon, a Methodist, preached at Heron's Siding on Sunday to 20 of the population of between 300 and 400. The majority of the rest were in saloons where saloon keepers, Ira Hawes, William Fitz and Gus Smith, served a variety of liquors."


Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]



PDF copies of  "Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III" are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
 
Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!
 
 

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Rigid Religionist: Settlers of Sanders County Montana: Vignette Vol.1 No.1

Vignette Vol.1 No.1[Resource: BEHIND THESE MOUNTAINS ]

Abrahams, Mr. & Mrs.

In 1865 Thomas Francis Meagher was appointed Secretary for the Territory of Montana. Excerpt--Meagher wrote, "Debarking the Mary Moody in a bustling little place ... in its noisy infancy - consisting of two houses, and a capacious shed for mules and horses. A saw-mill is in vehement operation...." Mr. Abrahams, the owner, he describes "a rigid religionist, who shuts himself hermetically up on Sundays.'Mrs. Abrahams' table' is perfumed with a bouquet of mountain flowers, the offering of the men at work about the Landing, who ... vindicate the proverbial gallantry of Americans to their countrywomen ... Another lady is present, whose son served in the Second Wisconsin at the first battle of Bull Run."

Abey, Newkercher & Co.
Noxon, Montana. Excerpt--"By 1892 Heron's population was down to seventy-five. Newkercher, Abey and Company built a shingle mill. Thomas H. Smith, a merchant at Heron since 1886, went into the saloon business at Noxon in 1892. Johnson and Burns, J.J. Kelly, and James W. Ruddy also had saloons, making four saloons for the railroad crews and transient lumberjacks. A.W. Bascomb, the lumber manufacturer, had a store, and [Max] Dunn, Hartwell and Company had a drugstore."


Quirk, William J.
1884. Heron. Excerpt--January 7, 1884, Heron's first post office was authorized, and William J. Quirk was appointed postmaster.(27) On April 30, the county commissioners at Missoula approved a toll ferry for Heron, granting the baker, Nicholas Bluerock, and Gustavus Patrick the right to operate it.(28) Located one and a half miles north of the NPRR depot, its primary purpose was to serve prospectors crossing the river.


Miss Wood
In July, Miss Wood was the first person to die in Heron of natural causes. There is no mention in the newspaper of the cause of death. By August, the new three and a half-story railroad hotel with rooms for 300 opened. According to The Missoulian, "The hotel cost $40,000 to build. It was operated by the dining car department of the railroad and all flunkies serving in it were colored."

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume I ]

 
 

Visit: Five Star Review

[Resource is also available free online @ Behind These Mountains, Volume III ]


PDF copies of  "Behind These Mountains, Vols. I, II & III" are available on a DVD - $50 S&H included, plus author's permission to print or have printed buyers personal copy of each of the approximately 1200 page books which contain about 1,000 photographs from homesteaders personal albums.
 

Order here:
Mona Leeson Vanek
13505 E Broadway Ave., Apt. 243
Spokane Valley, WA 99216
 
TO HAVE AN EXCERPT PUBLISHED IN BYGONE MONTANANS ABOUT A PERSON WHO MAY BE MENTIONED IN THIS REGIONAL MONTANA TRILOGY Email mtscribbler@air-pipe.com

Please visit often, and share with friends and acquaintances. If you find anyone with family ties, please leave a comment and contact information and share a memory to grow your family tree!