John Doerner, the retired chief historian of the battlefield, led the group to places not often seen by visitors and concentrated on the victors of the fight.
Content by AARP. Find out why Jeremy Keller devoted his military career to carrying on a long-standing family tradition.
Content by AARP. Collins said what he misses the most since retiring two years ago — after nearly 30 years in the military — is the camaraderie, teamwork and trust he experienced during training and service.
Content by AARP. When his plane was struck over Vietnam, Air Force Capt. John Nelson took action.
Baumler was the state's first interpretive historian at the Montana Historical Society. She dedicated herself to the job for 26 years, making significant contributions to Montana history.
The exhibit tells the story of the fight between the Nez Perce and the U.S. Army that happened nearly 150 years ago just north of present-day Laurel.
One set of granite slab steps to the handsome Hearst Free Library, completed in 1898 for the city of Anaconda, is receiving a needed fix.
The Gilmore cabin, also called Gilmore cow camp, will be more easily accessible to the public because the Bureau of Land Management has decided to open a half-mile route into the Bullwhacker region.
The road has been worn down, and hundreds of tire tracks litter the internment camp site, disturbing some of the old foundations.
What if our Montana historical buildings could talk?
The Ravalli County Museum has a new exhibit about promoting Glacier National Park and a fundraiser that features photos and artistry of Ernst Peterson and Robert Neaves.
J.J. Hill, president of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway, established the Montana Central Railway on January 25, 1886
Children in the Paul Clark Home were placed there usually as a temporary solution for serious family emergencies.
German Gulch enters Silver Bow Creek in Durant Canyon about 10 miles west of Butte.
Six years after a new photo of Harriet Tubman captured the world's imagination, another rare image of the abolitionist has been released.
After months of work in 1903 and 1904, the Silver Bow County Grand Jury returned eleven indictments on May 12, 1904
The Guangxu Emperor’s confidential advisor, Kang Yu Wei, came to Butte in 1905
Butte woman holds onto her memories.
The Gregson Hot Springs and Pleasure Resort began active advertising in September 1883, offering weekly accommodations including access to the hot springs pools at $12.00.
Ayme Swartz is an archaeologist who focuses on “giving a voice to the voiceless.”
He came to Butte in 1884 when he was 21 years old.
Before he became an x-ray instructor in Montana, Guy Copeman got his own education as an x-ray technician on Okinawa.
The “West End” of Butte in 1888 was the 400 block of West Quartz Street.
Butte real estate was booming in 1902, and Simeon V. Kemper (often referred to as Simon) was the senior real estate agent in the city.
There's just so many memories.
In 1906 when the Silver Bow Club was planning to build their new building at the corner of Granite and Alaska, two buildings stood in the way. Neither was demolished.
Hikes run July 13 through Sept. 7.
The St. Labre Boarding School Investigation Commission is chaired by the former president of Little Big Horn College on the Crow Reservation Janine Pease.
In April 1908 the Butte Evening News began a contest for Butte schoolchildren
The troupe was originally called “Gentry’s Equine and Canine Paradox” and had started at the family farm near Bloomington, Indiana, in 1885.