Montana Rails: Mountains to Prairies
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Dale W. Jones
Dale W. Jones resided for many years in the state of Montana, photographing trains at Essex in Glacier National Park; the Flathead Valley and Kalispell; Lewistown, branded as the "Center of the State;" and Plentywood on the northeast border with North Dakota and Saskatchewan.
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Montana Rails - Dale W. Jones
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INTRODUCTION
The mountains and prairies of Montana are the result of eons of geological time and millennia of human habitation. The routes railroads chose were influenced by ragged peaks, sandstone bluffs, flat-topped coulees, expansive valley prairies, and raging rivers. The human side of the story began thousands of years before Christopher Columbus’s ships landed in the Bahamas. Nomadic ancestors of modern Native Americans may have hiked over a land bridge from Asia to what is now Alaska several ages ago. Through the centuries, the indigenous tribes engaged in sharing and trading with each other via a complex and far-reaching network of land trails and waterways. A key route along the eastern foothills of the Continental Divide was the Old North Trail. Walter McClintock in his 1910 work quotes a Blackfoot native: There is a well-known trail we call the Old North Trail. It runs north and south along the Rocky Mountains. No one knows how long it has been used by the Indians. My father told me it originated in the migration of a great tribe of Indians from the distant north to the south, and all the tribes have, ever since, continued to follow in their tracks.
Prior to Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery, apparently few white men had visited the region. The first known to have explored this region was Sieur de La Vérendrye, who made his way up the Missouri River during the years 1730 to 1744, reaching the Rocky Mountains in January 1743. He did not remain, nor contribute any valuable historical information about the country.
Lewis and Clark recorded in detail their voyages of 1804 and 1805 up the Missouri River and the Clark Fork River, across the Bitterroot Mountains, and down the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean, returning along the Yellowstone River. While Lewis and Clark were mapping the Missouri River drainage on the east side of the Continental Divide, Canadian surveyor David Thompson explored the west side of the divide including the Columbia River and its many tributaries. After Lewis and Clark and David Thompson presented their maps and geographic descriptions of the Montana region, it was not long before mountain men, fur trappers, and gold miners from both the United States and Canada entered Big Sky Country.
Throughout the early 1800s to the 1850s, an assortment of travelers and trappers located new trails and water routes through the interior of the Rocky Mountains. In 1862, gold was discovered in southwestern Montana along Grasshopper Creek, with boomtowns emerging in Bannack, Virginia City, and Helena. To protect and unite the distant Western lands, the first planned long-distance road, the Mullan Military Road, commenced construction in 1860 at Fort Benton on the Missouri River, terminating 661 miles to the west at Fort Walla Walla, Washington Territory. Today, Interstate 15 and Interstate 90 follow approximately the route of John Mullan’s road through Montana, Idaho, and Washington. Through the 1850s to the 1870s, Montana was crisscrossed by numerous wagon roads; notable was the Corinne Road connecting Corinne, Utah, with Virginia City—this road would later become the path of Montana’s first railroad, the Utah & Northern, completed to Butte on December 26, 1881. This route was later acquired by the Union Pacific.
Railroad building began in earnest during the 1880s. From a shaky start in 1870, the Northern Pacific Railroad was the first transcontinental railway in Montana, completed August 23, 1883, at Hell Gate Canyon, 55 miles west of Helena. A last spike ceremony was held on September 8 at Gold Creek; interestingly, this spike was the same one hammered down 13 years earlier at Thomsons Junction, Minnesota, on February 15, 1870. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy (CB&Q) entered Montana south of Billings in the early 1900s.
Next in line across Montana was James J. Hill’s Great Northern Railway. Hill purchased several St. Paul, Minnesota, bankrupt companies in 1878 and revitalized them until they were profitable. In 1879, under the corporate umbrella of the St. Paul,