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Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

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Page 1: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Montana’s GeographyPart I

Cities & Reservations

Page 2: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Billings Population 91,750 (115,000 metro) in 2000; 106, 954 in

2012 (162,848 metro). On the Yellowstone River Started out as a rail town, but has become the major city

in Montana Oil (three major refineries in the area Conoco, Exxon,

Cenex) In 1992 it was listed as America’s 2nd most popular city

to move to. Named after the railroad tycoon president of the Northern

Pacific Railroad, it is called "The Magic City" as the town site was laid out in 1882 and a month later 5,000 lots had been sold for cash. By the end of that year, there were 155 commercial buildings, 99 homes, 6 railroad buildings and 25 tents where only 3 buildings stood before. The town appeared "magically."

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Billings at night

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Great Falls Population 56,395 (70,000 metro) in 2000;

58,950 in 2012 (81,723 metro) On the confluence of the Missouri and the Sun

Rivers Economy revolves around agriculture/service

and smelting and refining “The Electric City” Since the mid 80s, the economy has steadily

worsened (closure of Anaconda Company, lessening of refinery work and agriculture)

Malmstrom Air Force Base Total of 4,800 employees (annual payroll of $84

million) totaling 30-35% of the city’s economy

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Black Eagle Falls

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Missoula Population 52,239 (70,000 metro) in 2000;

68,394 in 2012 (109,299 metro) “The Garden City” On the Clark’s Fork River Home to the University of Montana (Go Griz!),

the premier journalism school in the west, and the only law school in Montana.

Wood products industry (logging, paper mills) Inversion – air pollution

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Downtown Missoula; Missoula as seen from above the University of Montana

Page 11: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Virtual Tour of UM Campus: http://www.umt.edu/virtualtour/

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Butte Population 33,994 in 2000; 34,200 in 2010 A one time mining camp, its population was 100,000 in

1917 A bastion of organized labor unions, the Democratic Party,

and Catholicism Most ethnically diverse of Montana’s communities

(people of Irish, Finnish, Serbian, Cornish, Italian, Slavic descent)

Berkeley Pit – filling with acid water at over 3,500 gallons per minute.

Mainstay of the modern economy is federal money poured into cleaning up the mess made by mining

Home of “Montana Tech,” known as “Montana School of Mines” One of the highest placement rates in MT

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Photos of uptown Butte, Montana

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Bozeman Population 29,936 (metro 30,000) in 2000;

38,695 in 2012 (micropolitan population of 92,614)

Flanked by the Hyalite Range on the South and the Bridger Mountains on the west.

Agricultural/tourism economy Home to Montana State University (Go

Bobcats!), one of the best engineering schools in the northwest.

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Flathead Reservation Population 21,259 in 2000; 28,359 in 2010. Home to the Confederated Salish, Kalispel, and

Kootenai tribes 1.24 million acres reaching from midway up Flathead

Lake south to the Mountains just North of Missoula. One of the most prosperous reservations with

income from lumber and Kerr Dam which controls the level of Flathead Lake – also a power plant run by the tribes.

Unemployment is far lower than on most reservations.

Salish-Kootenai College and a community college at Pablo show its progressive feel.

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Kalispell Population 16,089 (metro 25,000) in 2000;

20,487 in 2012 (micropolitan population 91,633).

Natural resource economy (lumber and agriculture)

Tourism/recreation are also important Flathead Valley Community College North of Flathead Lake

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Fort Peck Reservation Population 10,595 Home to Assiniboine and Western Sioux tribes Resource-rich reservation with oil and natural

gas Under the leadership of tribal chairman, Norman

Hollow, the reservation built one of Montana’s largest manufacturing plants at Poplar which assembled products.

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Fishing is excellent on the Fort Peck Reservation.

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Havre Population 10,200 in 2000; 9,310 in 2010 Originally called “Bullhook Bottoms,” Havre started

as (and STILL is) a rail town. Burlington Northern RR is the center of its

economy, but they cut 1/3rd of upper end jobs there in 1992.

Shopping center for much of the Hi-Line. Home to MSU-Northern – which is the only non-

reservation higher education access in the region.

Page 30: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Havre Beneath the Streets: an old underground pharmacy, and an old underground, er, “hotel” room

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Miles City Population 8,500 in 2000; 8,569 in 2012 Located where the Tongue River joins the Yellowstone

River. The quintessential “cow town.” Home of the world famous “Bucking Horse Sale” every

May. The economy stems from livestock & federal

employment and investment (the two are intertwined.)

The economy suffered in the 80s due to drought, but it is on its way up again. Oil boom in the Bakken has boosted Miles City’s

economy.

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Looking west on Main Street in downtown Miles City

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Custer County District High School in Miles City – where my English teacher, Mrs. Horton, told my friend Jerry to get out of her classroom “before I rip your face off!”

Page 37: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Ismay, Montana – near Miles City. Renamed itself Joe, Montana in the 1990s, resulting in the whole town (28 people) being invited to appear on the Late Show with David Letterman

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Blackfeet Reservation Population 8,549 in 2000; 10,405 in 2010 One of the windiest places in America Nearly 1.5 million acres Home to the Blackfeet tribe 40% of the reservation is owned by non-Indians

due to federal allotments It has its own industrial park where pencils and pens

are manufactured Oil and gas reserves make up well over half of all

tribal income Tourism economy has been boosted by Glacier

Peaks Casino.

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Blackfeet Reservation: Browning (top) and Heart Butte (below)

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Blackfeet Nation Singers

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Crow Reservation Population 6,366 in 2000; 7,900 in 2012 2 million acres Crosses the drainages of the Bighorn and the Little

Big Horn Rivers. A majority of the 8,000 Crow people live on the

reservation 66% of the reservation land is controlled by

non-tribal members Rich in grazing land and millions of tons of

mineable coal. Over 80% of the population speak the native Crow

language

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Crow Reservation images: Bighorn Canyon; Crow Fair; a government-built home in Crow Agency

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Crow Medicine Wheel

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Lewistown Population 6,159 in 2000; 5,901 in 2010 Judith Mountains to the north and the Snowies to

the south Directly in the center of the state Agricultural economy Slavic immigrants did the impressive masonry

work on the domed courthouse and other buildings

Big Spring is there which pumps 3 million gallons of water per hour at 99.9% purity – one of the world’s greatest freshwater springs.

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Fergus County Courthouse

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Facing east on Main Street in Lewistown

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Glendive Population 4,421 in 2000; 4,925 in 2010 Economy – oil, agriculture, railroad, and a

privately-run prison that handles inmates for the state of Montana.

In the past two decades, its population has risen and fallen by 25% in the boom and bust of the petroleum and railroading industries. Currently booming again due to the Bakken oil field

boom.

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Makoshika State Park near Glendive Famous for the scenery and dinosaur

fossils

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Northern Cheyenne Reservation Population 3,923 in 2000; 4,939 in 2013 The small, impoverished reservation (445,000

acres) has 23 million tons of mineable coal. Tribe was skeptical about disrupting culture with

massive coal development but is now largely in favor of it.

High rate of unemployment Council of Forty-four 97% of the reservation land remains in tribal

hands.

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Northern Cheyenne Reservation: the Ft. Robinson Spiritual Outbreak Run in Busby; Lame Deer; Jimtown Bar in Lame Deer; Dull Knife College in Lame Deer

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Crow and Northern Cheyenne Hospital

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Crow and Northern Cheyenne Hospital Entryway Mural

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Crow and Northern Cheyenne Hospital Lobby

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Fort Belknap Reservation Population 2,508 in 2000; 2,851 in 2010 646,000 acres 2000 enrolled Assiniboine; 3000 enrolled Gros

Ventre. 50% of enrolled tribal members live on the

reservation Home to Gros Ventre and Assiniboine tribes Lack of natural resource wealth Zortman-Lansdusky gold mine lies at the south

end of the reservation but was long ago extracted from Indian ownership.

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Ft. Belknap Reservation: Mission Canyon near Hays, Mt.

Page 63: Montana’s Geography Part I Cities & Reservations

Polluted stream bed on the Fort Belknap Reservation from the Zortman-Lansdusky Mine.

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Rocky Boy’s Reservation Population 1,954 in 2000; 3,323 in 2010 108,000 acres (smallest reservation) Named after Chief Stone Child Foothills of the Bear’s Paw Mountains Home of refugee Cree, Chippewa, and Métis

from Canada Northern Winz Casino has boosted local

economy 2014: accepted controversial grant funding for

new playground from NFL’s Washington Redskins.

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Stone Child College on Rocky Boy Reservation

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No tour of Montana is complete without this: the Jersey Lilly in Ingomar (population 27?) – great food, but no indoor plumbing!