The Pick and Shovel Duane Thexton Ennis MT 59729 Official Newsletter of the Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers 2Nd Vice President Mike Collins Fall 2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Pick and Shovel Duane Thexton Ennis MT 59729 Official Newsletter of the Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers 2Nd Vice President Mike Collins Fall 2020 Officers President Janet Sticht Seeley Lake 1st Vice President The Pick and Shovel Duane Thexton Ennis MT 59729 Official Newsletter of the Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers 2nd Vice President Mike Collins Fall 2020 Helena, MT “Chartered by the State Their Parents Founded” Secretary/Treasurer HAMILTON 2021 VACANT Historian Looks like Hamilton is going to be a go this year. I will include all the infor- Charlotte Orr mation you need to know and we pray and hope all goes well so we can have Missoula, MT 59802 our conference this year, in Hamilton. Registrar Keith Ball Lolo MT 59847 Past President Tim Sowa E. Helena Directors Expiring 2021 James Kovatch Bozeman, MT Larry Rowland Billings, MT Directors Expiring 2021 Jim Quigley Avon, MT BITTERROOT RIVER INN AND CONFERENCE CENTER Larry Dobb Located on the banks of the Bitterroot River off Hwy 93. Great Falls, MT 139 Bitterroot Plaza Drive, Hamilton, MT 59840 Directors Expiring 2022 Ted Richardson For reservations call 406 363-3484 Somers, MT Mention Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers Conference Mary Don Glidewell Helmville, MT August 13-14, 2021 Editor First conference meeting starts at 9:00 am on the 13th Michael Russell Helena, MT Check in for conference opens at 8:00 am cow- [email protected] POINTS OF INTEREST IN HAMILTON The Ravalli County Museum in Hamilton, Montana, is operated by the Bitter Root Valley Historical Society in order to acquire, preserve, and interpret the historical and cultural heritage of the Bitter Root Valley and the inhabitants of Ravalli County, Montana. United States. The Museum is open year-round and features three main focal points: local history, natural history and art. The town of Hamilton is the central trade area for hun- dreds of small farms, ranches and orchards that fill the valley. Hamilton is home to the Daly Mansion built in the late 1800s for Marcus Daly, one of Montana's col-orful "Copper Kings." Ravalli County Museum is located in the original Ravalli County Courthouse built in 1900. Saved from the wrecker's ball in 1979, it is now listed in the National Register of Historic Buildings and con-sidered one of the finest museums for a town of this size. STOCK FARM GOLF COURSE Big Sky Candy is another place I am sure you might want to visit Henry Plummer(1832–1864) Henry was a prospector, lawman, and outlaw in the American West in the 1850s and 1860s, who was known to have killed several men, some in what was considered self- defense. He was elected sheriff of Bannack, Montana from 1863 to 1864, during which period he was accused of being the leader of a "road agent" gang of outlaws known as the "Innocents," which preyed on shipments from Virginia City to other areas. In response some leaders in Virginia City formed the Vigilance Committee of Alder Gulch, and began to take action against Plummer's gang, gaining confessions from a couple of men they arrested in early January 1864. On January 10, 1864 Plummer and two associates were arrested in Bannack by a company of the Vigilantes and summarily hanged. Plummer was given a posthumous trial in 1993 which led to a mistrial. The jury was split 6 –6. Information from Legends of the West—Wikipedia Granville Stuart – Montana Pioneer Hero Granville Stuart (1834-1918) Frontiersman, miner, Montana Land Baron, leader of the vigilante group called Stuart’s Stranglers, author and more, Granville Stuart is recognized as a Montana pioneer and hero.Born near what is now Clarksburg, West Virginia on August 27, 1834, to Robert and Nancy Currence Stuart, Granville moved with his family to Muscatine County, Iowa in 1838. As a child, he played with Indians and attended school in a one-room schoolhouse. In 1849, his father flocked to the California Goldrush along with thousands of others seek- ing their fortunes. Two years later, Granville and his brothers, James and Robert followed, where they prospected for several years. In June 1857, Granville and James wanted to return to Iowa for a visit; however, when they found the trail blocked by the Mormon War in Utah, they went north instead, landing in Mon- tana. Prospecting for gold in Deer Lodge Valley, they were credited with making the first major strike in Gold Creek in 1858. However, having no supplies and concerned about Indian attacks, they soon left the area. Four years later, they returned and a small mining camp developed at the mouth of the creek that is today called Gold Creek. For the next several years, the brothers continued their prospecting efforts along Gold Creek and also worked as merchants. In the meantime, they had written a letter to their third brother, Robert, who was by then prospecting in Colorado. Within no time, word of the find got out and scores of prospectors from Colorado and other surrounding territories made their way to Montana. In the spring of 1862, Granville married a Snake Indian woman named Aubony, later called Ellen. They would ultimately have nine children before her death in 1887. In the meantime, the small settlement of Gold Creek was growing and Granville was elected County Commission- er and James was elected Sheriff. Though credited with the first major gold find, the Stuart brothers never profited much and by 1863, Granville had made his way to Virginia City, where he entered the mercantile business. James Stuart, in the meantime, was leading expeditions into Yellowstone, looking for gold. In 1865, Granville sold his business and returned to Deer Lodge, where he again established a mercantile, and later, a lumberyard. James was also in Deer Lodge until 1870 when he was appointed to the post of physician at the Fort Peck agency. James remained there until his death from cancer on September 30, 1873. That same year, Granville sold his merchant in- terests and returned to mining. However, once again, this career path didn’t “payout” for Granville, and by 1876, he was working as a bookkeeper for Samuel T. Hauser’s First National Bank in Helena. Three years later, in 1879, Stuart, along with Hauser and mining millionaires, Andrew J. and Erwin Davis, formed the Hauser, Davis, Stuart Cattle Company and the DHS Ranch. Stuart be- came the general manager of the company, a position he would hold until the spring of 1887. While managing the cattle company, Stuart was instrumental in organizing the Montana Stock Growers Association in 1884 and became its first president. During this time, cattle rustling was rampant in the territory and Granville reportedly orga- nized a group of vigilantes in 1884 that became known as Stuart’s Stranglers to help curb some of this lawlessness. Within no time dozens of Montana outlaws had either been strung up in trees or riddled with bullets. The Montana Vigilantes got their start around this time as well, but it is unclear as to whether Stuart had and anything to do with the original vigilante group, although they probably influenced his formation of Stuart’s Stranglers. Still at the helm of the extremely profitable DHS Cattle Company, the organization was worth more than a million dollars by 1885. However, two years later, Granville got out of the cattle business, though he remained the president of the Board of Stock Commissioners until 1891. With his eye on politics, Granville became a state land agent in charge of 600,000 acres given to Montana by the federal government for school purposes in 1891. That same year, he remarried a woman named Isabel Allis Brown. In 1894, he was appointed as a U.S. ambassador to Uruguay and Paraguay, a position he held until 1898. In his final years, he served as librarian of the Butte Public Library. Over the years, Stuart had been involved in the preservation of Montana History, serving as the first secre- tary of the Montana Historical Society and as its president from 1890 to 1895. He was also the president of the Society of Montana Pioneers in 1886-87. In his last years, he worked diligently to document the history of Montana Territory (1864 – 1889), but he died before it was completed. Stuart Granville died on October 2, 1918, in Mis- soula, Montana. The vast majority of his work, however, was published under the title Forty Years on the Frontier in 1925. As a tribute to his life, Granville Stuart is often called “Mr. Montana,” as his life story is much the same as that of the fledgling territory of Montana. Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers PO Box 1051 Helena MT 59624 Return Service Requested Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers “Chartered by the state their parents founded” <sonsanddaughtersmontanapioneers.com> SDMP Items for Sale Below are items we have for Sale from the SDMP. Be proud to tell everyone that you belong to this great organization, The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers. Items will be available in Hamilton or go to our website for prices: http://www.sonsanddaughtersmontanapionners.com and look for the Sale link. From the Editor: My dog Hank was selected to be in a commercial for the Montana Deportment of Public Health and Human Services. Hank is our 10 year old Blue Heeler from our kennel, Montana Blue Sky ACD’s. The commercial is about a man that was hooked on Opioids and with the help from the DPHHS and his dog Hank, he recovered from his addiction and is now clean from drugs. The pictures below are of our boy Hank and the young man that had the addiction. The commercial is still in post production and will air on Montana TV.
Recommended publications
  • November 2020- January 2021
    AMERICAN LEGION DEPARTMENT OF MONTANA Non-Profit Org. ARMED FORCES RESERVE CENTER U.S. Postage P.O. BOX 6075 HELENA, MT 59604-6075 PAID Permit No. 189 Helena, MT 59601 Volume 98, No. 2 November 2020— January 2021 RAYMOND J NYDEGGER Important Upcoming Dates Nov 11 ........................... Veterans Day DEPARTMENT COMMANDER 1975-76 Nov 26 ........................... Thanksgiving Raymond J Nydegger, Depart- Ray was very civic minded, he Dec 7 .......................Pearl Harbor Day ment Commander 1975-76 of belonged to the Masons, Eastern Dec 9 .....................75% Target Date – Renewal Cut Off Date Melstone, a 65-year member of Star and Shrine; he was also Dec 11 .................................Hanukkah Townsend Post 42 passed away on a former Dad Advisor for the Dec 15 .............. All Employer Awards August 18, 2020. Ray served in the DeMolay and a former Mayor of due to Department US Navy aboard the AE4 USS MT Townsend. Dec 25 ............................... Christmas Baker, an ammunition ship, during Dec 26 .........All 2021 Cash Calendars Ray is survived by his wife due back to Department the Korean War. Jeanne of Melstone, who served Jan 1 ................. New Year’s Day 2021 Ray held all elected offices of the as the Department Auxiliary Jan 2 ..........First 2021 Big K Drawings Post and District; additionally, he President the same year Ray was First 2021 Cash Calendar held many of the appointed offices drawings Commander; and his daughters, Jan 5 ...........................MT Legionnaire in both the Post and District. At Jennifer Bergin and Jody Haa- Feb / Mar / Apr issue cutoff date the Department level he served as gland; and son John.
    [Show full text]
  • Yellowstone Expedition of 1863 Marked by Hardship and Privation; Indians Killed Three
    THE FLATHEAD COURIER Yellowstone Expedition of 1863 Marked by Hardship and Privation; Indians Killed Three NE of the most notable trIpa recorded in the annals of Mon- , s self, he urged upon them the necessity of leaving the camp where they were tans. pioneer days was that a, 11) I -\ the,. Yellowstone expedition at , rett esigns before dark lest the Indians come upon SACAJAWEA COIN Fifteen-Year-Old 0 again. I First Pilot 1863, led by James Stuart and them composed in all of 15 men. The party Sixteen-Day Struggle III I Hunter Bags Bannock April 10, traveled 1,600 rom Liquor For 16 days they struggled on, their IS TURNED DOWN Deer miles, going as far east as the Big weary and jaded and often with- Horn river and returning by way of out era-The men had (wily a small With Small Rifle Soda springs and Fort Hall, Ida., ar- Board Setup ration of bread for themselves. There PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AND 'THE riving at Bannack on June 22. The seemed to be no game in the COuntrY• COMMITTEE MEMBERS trip fighting prox- OP- was filled with against At all times they were in close Thomas Hopkinson, 15, got hostile Indians, and many other dan- ACCEPTS POSITION an POSE ISSUANCE his first AS MONTANA !may to bands of roving Indians deer a few days ago. It was a gers and hardships. Three of the every night. At noon three- MANAGER FOR CALVERT expecting attack point buck, weighing 165 pounds. party were killed and more than half on May 28, they came within sight of The Lewis and DISTILLERS CORP.
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Stuart Homestead Site: Historic Context Report
    Thomas Stuart Homestead Historic Context Report Grant-Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site Avana Andrade Public Lands History Center at Colorado State University 2/1/2012 1 Thomas Stuart Homestead Site: Historic Context Report Grant-Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site in Deer Lodge Montana is currently developing plans for a new contact station. One potential location will affect the site of a late-nineteenth-century historic homestead. Accordingly, the National Park Service and the Montana State Historic Preservation Office need more information about the historic importance of the Thomas Stuart homestead site to determine future decisions concerning the contact station. The following report provides the historic contexts within which to assess the resource’s historic significance according to National Register of Historic Places guidelines. The report examines the site’s association with Thomas Stuart, a Deer Lodge pioneer, and the Menards, a French- Canadian family, and presents the wider historical context of the fur trade, Deer Lodge’s mixed cultural milieu, and the community’s transformation into a settled, agrarian town. Though only indications of foundations and other site features remain at the homestead, the report seeks to give the most complete picture of the site’s history. Site Significance and Integrity The Thomas Stuart homestead site is evaluated according to the National Register of Historic Places, a program designed in the 1960s to provide a comprehensive listing of the United States’ significant historic properties. Listing on the National Register officially verifies a site’s importance and requires park administrators or land managers to consider the significance of the property when planning federally funded projects.
    [Show full text]
  • Recreational Trails Master Plan
    Beaverhead County Recreational Trails Master Plan Prepared by: Beaverhead County Recreational Trails Master Plan Prepared for: Beaverhead County Beaverhead County Commissioners 2 South Pacific Dillon, MT 59725 Prepared by: WWC Engineering 1275 Maple Street, Suite F Helena, MT 59601 (406) 443-3962 Fax: (406) 449-0056 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary ...................................................................................................... 1 Overview ...................................................................................................................... 1 Public Involvement .................................................................................................... 1 Key Components of the Plan ..................................................................................... 1 Intent of the Plan ....................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1 - Master Plan Overview................................................................................ 3 1.1 Introduction ........................................................................................................... 3 1.1.1 Project Location ............................................................................................... 3 1.2 Project Goals ......................................................................................................... 3 1.2.1 Variety of Uses ................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • East Bench Unit History
    East Bench Unit Three Forks Division Pick Sloan Missouri Basin Program Jedediah S. Rogers Bureau of Reclamation 2008 Table of Contents East Bench Unit...............................................................2 Pick Sloan Missouri Basin Program .........................................2 Project Location.........................................................2 Historic Setting .........................................................3 Investigations...........................................................7 Project Authorization....................................................10 Construction History ....................................................10 Post Construction History ................................................15 Settlement of Project Lands ...............................................19 Project Benefits and Uses of Project Water...................................20 Conclusion............................................................21 Bibliography ................................................................23 Archival Sources .......................................................23 Government Documents .................................................23 Books ................................................................24 Other Sources..........................................................24 1 East Bench Unit Pick Sloan Missouri Basin Program Located in rural southwest Montana, the East Bench Unit of the Pick Sloan Missouri Basin Program provides water to 21,800 acres along the Beaverhead River in
    [Show full text]
  • A HISTORY OP FORT SHAW, MONTANA, from 1867 to 1892. by ANNE M. DIEKHANS SUBMITTED in PARTIAL FULFILLMENT of "CUM LAUDE"
    A HISTORY OP FORT SHAW, MONTANA, FROM 1867 TO 1892. by ANNE M. DIEKHANS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF "CUM LAUDE" RECOGNITION to the DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY CARROLL COLLEGE 1959 CARROLL COLLEGE LIBRARY HELENA, MONTANA MONTANA COLLECTION CARROLL COLLEGE LIBRAS/- &-I THIS THESIS FOR "CUM LAUDE RECOGNITION BY ANNE M. DIEKHANS HAS BEEN APPROVED FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY Date ii PREFACE Fort Shaw existed as a military post between the years of 1867 and 1892. The purpose of this thesis is to present the history of the post in its military aspects during that period. Other aspects are included but the emphasis is on the function of Fort Shaw as district headquarters of the United States Army in Montana Territory. I would like to thank all those who assisted me in any way in the writing of this thesis. I especially want to thank Miss Virginia Walton of the Montana Historical Society and the Rev. John McCarthy of the Carroll faculty for their aid and advice in the writing of this thesis. For techni­ cal advice I am indebted to Sister Mary Ambrosia of the Eng­ lish department at Carroll College. I also wish to thank the Rev. James R. White# Mr. Thomas A. Clinch, and Mr. Rich­ ard Duffy who assisted with advice and pictures. Thank you is also in order to Mrs. Shirley Coggeshall of Helena who typed the manuscript. A.M.D. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Chggter Page I. GENERAL BACKGROUND............................... 1 II. MILITARY ACTIVITIES............................. 14 Baker Massacre Sioux Campaign The Big Hole Policing Duties Escort and Patrol Duties III.
    [Show full text]
  • Ranching in Beaverhead County, 1863--1960| Transition Through Three Generations
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1990 Ranching in Beaverhead County, 1863--1960| Transition through three generations Liza Nicholas The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Nicholas, Liza, "Ranching in Beaverhead County, 1863--1960| Transition through three generations" (1990). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 3353. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/3353 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Maureen and Mike MANSFIELD LIBRARY Copying allowed as provided under provisions of the Fair Use Section of the U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW, 1976. Any copying for commercial purposes or financial gain may be undertaken only with the author's written consent. MontanaUniversity of RANCHING IN BEAVERHEAD COUNTY: 1863-1960 TRANSITION THROUGH THREE GENERATIONS by Liza Nicholas B.A. Montana State University, 1987 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Montana 1990 \ Approved by: ik Chairman, Board of Examiners Dean, Graduate School Date UMI Number: EP36325 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted.
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia City, Montana the Women of Virginia City Tour, by Ellen Baumler
    New Cemetery a WElcomE to A VirginiA City, MontAnA The Women of Virginia City Tour, by Ellen Baumler Highway 287 5 Boot Hill Fairweather Street 1 Cemetery Spencer Street Hamilton Street Broadway Street 3 Van Buren Street 4 6 Jackson Street Wallace Street (Highway 287) Cover Street 7 8 26 2 9 13 25 10 14 11 16 24 23 15 12 22 17 20 Idaho Street 18 21 Warren Street 19 1 Boot Hill 7 McKay-McNulty House 13 Dance and Stuart Store 19 Coggswell/Taylor Cabins 25 Sanders House 2 The Brick 8 Hangman’s Building 14 Aunt Julia’s 20 Thomas Francis Meagher House 26 Henry Elling Home 3 Martin Lyon House 9 Fairweather Inn 15 Smith and Boyd Livery 21 Mrs. Slade’s House 4 Elephant Corral 10 Gypsy Arcade 16 Green Front Boarding House 22 Methodist Church Site 5 Rockfellow House 11 McGovern Store 17 First Madison County Jail 23 Daems House 6 Gilbert House 12 Sauerbier Blacksmith Shop 18 St. Mary’s Hospital/Bonanza Inn 24 Episcopal Church The Women of Virginia City road agents. Because of the stigma attached to the five, most families moved their loved ones’ graves to Hillside Cemetery across the ridge, but there was Alder Gulch boomed with the discovery of gold in 1863. Nicknamed the no one to move the Daltons. It was not until the 1920s that Mathilda’s children Fourteen-Mile City, of the nine communities that sprang up along the gulch, returned to Virginia City to mark their grandparents’ graves. Virginia City emerged as the largest.
    [Show full text]
  • Southwest MONTANA
    visitvisit SouthWest MONTANA 2017 OFFICIAL REGIONAL TRAVEL GUIDE SOUTHWESTMT.COM • 800-879-1159 Powwow (Lisa Wareham) Sawtooth Lake (Chuck Haney) Horses (Michael Flaherty) Bannack State Park (Donnie Sexton) SouthWest MONTANABetween Yellowstone National Park and Glacier National Park lies a landscape that encapsulates the best of what Montana’s about. Here, breathtaking crags pierce the bluest sky you’ve ever seen. Vast flocks of trumpeter swans splash down on the emerald waters of high mountain lakes. Quiet ghost towns beckon you back into history. Lively communities buzz with the welcoming vibe and creative energy of today’s frontier. Whether your passion is snowboarding or golfing, microbrews or monster trout, you’ll find endless riches in Southwest Montana. You’ll also find gems of places to enjoy a hearty meal or rest your head — from friendly roadside diners to lavish Western resorts. We look forward to sharing this Rexford Yaak Eureka Westby GLACIER Whitetail Babb Sweetgrass Four Flaxville NATIONAL Opheim Buttes Fortine Polebridge Sunburst Turner remarkable place with you. Trego St. Mary PARK Loring Whitewater Peerless Scobey Plentywood Lake Cut Bank Troy Apgar McDonald Browning Chinook Medicine Lake Libby West Glacier Columbia Shelby Falls Coram Rudyard Martin City Chester Froid Whitefish East Glacier Galata Havre Fort Hinsdale Saint Hungry Saco Lustre Horse Park Valier Box Belknap Marie Elder Dodson Vandalia Kalispell Essex Agency Heart Butte Malta Culbertson Kila Dupuyer Wolf Marion Bigfork Flathead River Glasgow Nashua Poplar Heron Big Sandy Point Somers Conrad Bainville Noxon Lakeside Rollins Bynum Brady Proctor Swan Lake Fort Fairview Trout Dayton Virgelle Peck Creek Elmo Fort Benton Loma Thompson Big Arm Choteau Landusky Zortman Sidney Falls Hot Springs Polson Lambert Crane Condon Fairfield Great Ronan Vaughn Haugan Falls Savage De Borgia Plains Charlo Augusta CONTENTS Paradise Winifred Bloomfield St.
    [Show full text]
  • A. Clifford Edwards, Esquire
    “WHY DO YOU HURT ME SO?” By: A. Clifford Edwards, Esquire THE INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF TRIAL LAWYERS DEAN’S ADDRESS APRIL 7, 2017 SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA A Publication of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers Why Do You Hurt Me So? Good morning Academy! The opinions, express or implied, in this Dean’s Address are solely my own; nothing more, nothing less. President Burbidge; soon-to-be President Noël; fellow officers; my sisters and brothers of our special Academy, guests and my Edwards’ family supporting me here today; Page | 1 Susan – my wife, of such beauty, both of spirit and appearance, my soulmate, as hand-in-hand we experience our lives together; My cherished sons Christopher and John, the proudest achievements of my life; my best friends and only law partners; Their wives, my Daughters-in-law, Kelly and Hollis, who have so enriched and enhanced our Edwards’ family; And, an unexpected bonus that came into my life with her mother Susan over a decade ago when she was just 12, my stepdaughter Alex. Now, we welcome her significant, Patrick Lopach. Then, our little shining family Beacons, – the Edwards’ grandchildren – Ellie Marie, Wright, A.C. and Bella! Now please, you four, sit. Be still! Grandpa’s going to be givin’ a speech. Mother Nature I posit the title of my Dean’s Address – “Why Do You Hurt Me So?” as a troubled query from our wounded Mother of this beautiful and bountiful planet we each absorb every day of our lives. Susan and I share an instilled love for Mother Nature from our Montana upbringings.
    [Show full text]
  • The Florida Mason
    THE FLORIDA M SON FREE & ACCEPTED MASONS OF THE GRAND LODGE OF FLORIDA VOLUME 102 ISSUE 3 NOVEMBER 2003 www.phmainstreet.com/flmason www.glflamason.org "Today’s Basics provide Tomorrow’s Light" ARTWORK courtesy of the grand lodge of montana MONTANA 3-7-77 “How Freemasonry tamed a Territory” See STORY ON PAGE 5 M:.W:.John R. Givens Grand Master (2003-2004) THE FLORIDA MASON IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 102 ISSUE 3 Editor's Message - "Failing" 3 NOVEMBER 2003 htp://www.phmainstreet.com/flmason/ Down the Road (Calendar of Events) 4 EDITOR MONTANA 3-7-77 (Cover Story) 5 W:. Tim Bryce P.O. Box 1637 NEWS FROM AROUND THE STATE Palm Harbor, FL 34682-1637 Tel: 727/786-4567 Amelia Lodge Holds Ft. Clinch Civil 14 Fax: 727/786-4765 War-era MM Degree E-Mail: [email protected] Harbor City, Merritt Island, and Brevard 16 BUSINESS MANAGER confer Joint MM Degree State Chairman, Public Relations & Publicity R:.W:. Bob Harry, PDDGM Sutherland initiates Six Brothers; 17 5337 Riverview Drive That's Right - 6 St. Augustine, FL 32080 Tel: 904/461-0171 (H) News from Hibiscus Lodge No. 275 18 Tel: 904/806-1255 (O) in Coral Gables E-Mail: [email protected] Indian River Lodge No. 90 Donates 19 PUBLISHER to Area Schools The Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Florida News from Olin S. Wright Lodge No. 79 F.& A.M. 19 Located at: 220 Ocean Street, Jacksonville, FL 32202 MASONIC EDUCATION, OPINIONS & POETRY Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1020, Jacksonville, FL 32201-1020 Not One Person - W:.Dan Weatherington, PM 20 Tel: 800/375-2339 WWW: http://www.glflamason.org/ Masonic Virtues/Masonic Attributes 20 - W:.Gil Weisman, PM Grand Lodge Elected Officers for 2003-2004 Grand Master - M:.W:.
    [Show full text]
  • Montana's "Boodlers"
    MONTANA'S "BOODLERS": MONTANANS AND THE AFTERMATH OF THE 1899 SENATORIAL SCANDAL by WILLIAM J. YAEGER 'll*- Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation with Honors to the Department of History at Carroll College Helena, Montana March, 1983 3 5962 00083 098 Tv This thesis for honors recognition has been approved for the Department of History. Director x fko-. 1 . <1 Reader ^7^/ j>z /are Date ii CONTENTS PREFACE...................................................................................................... iv Chapter I. FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO BRIBERY IN U.S. SENATORIAL ELECTIONS................................................................. 1 II. THE "WAR" THAT LED TO A SCANDAL.............................................. 6 III. THE BUYING OF A LEGISLATURE.................................................... 13 IV. THE CHANDLER HEARING: THE RESIGNATION AND REAPPOINTMENT OF W.A. CLARK................................................... 27 V. AFTERAFFECTS OF MONTANA'S SCANDAL OF 1899............................ 34 VI. CONCLUSIONS..................................................................................... 40 APPENDIX A. THE VALEDICTORY OF SENATOR FRED WHITESIDE........................ 44 B. THE EVERETT BILL......................................................................... 47 SOURCES CONSULTED................................................................................... 51 i i i PREFACE As a newsman, I have had to endure accusations at various times that I (meaning my profession) had fabricated
    [Show full text]