List 8 Tourist Attractions in Butte, Montana | Travel to United States
Here, 8 Top Tourist Attractions in Butte, US State..
There's World Museum of Mining, Berkeley Pit, Granite Mountain Memorial Overlook, Copper King Mansion, Our Lady of the Rockies, Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives, Dumas Brothel Museum, The Mai Wah and more...
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Steamboats in Montana
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives continues its Brown Bag Lunch series with a presentation by Evan Kelly. His talk will focus on analyzing and interpreting the important role that steamboats played in the material and cultural changes occurring in Montana from 1859 to 1890. The talk will examine first person accounts from steamboat journeys, beginning with case studies from the fur trade era and the Montana Gold Rush, and continuing through to the start of the railroad era. Discussions will highlight the different ways that steamboats interacted with the environmental and cultural forces in the region.
Evan Kelly is a graduate student in the History Department at Montana State University. He is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Environmental History and the History of the American West. Before graduate school Evan was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ukraine where he spent two years teaching English as a Second Language. This year, Evan spent his summer working in Israel as a field archaeologist where he helped excavate a Roman legionary base.
Top 11. Best Tourist Attractions in Butte - Montana
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The most beautiful places and sight in Butte.
Top 11. Best Tourist Attractions in Butte - Montana: World Museum of Mining, Granite Mountain Memorial Overlook, Berkeley Pit, Headframe Spirits, Our Lady of the Rockies, MBMG Mineral Museum, Copper King Mansion, Clark Chateau, Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives, Dumas Brothel Museum, The Piccadilly Museum
Hidden Tunnels of Butte by Richard Gibson
Richard Gibson's presentation Hidden Tunnels of Butte, which was presented at the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives Brown Bag Lunch series on September 25, 2013.
Montana 1889 with Ken Egan
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives continues its Brown Bag Lunch series with a presentation and book signing by Ken Egan Jr. entitled Montana 1889. The year Montana became a state comes alive in Ken Egan Jr.’s new book, a vivid description of the people and politics swirling through Montana during that crucial time. Insightful and compelling, Egan’s new book makes a worthy sequel to his Montana 1864, the highly acclaimed history about Montana’s territorial year.
Egan, executive director of Humanities Montana in Missoula, said he was struck by the changes between those years. “It was one of the most rapid and dramatic transformations of land and peoples in United States history,” Egan said.
Between 1864 and 1889, the buffalo were exterminated, the Indian wars ended, tribal nations were confined to reservations, cattle and sheep by the tens of thousands grazed the open range, Butte exploded into a city with electricity and millionaires, and multiple railroads connected Montana to the world.
Montana 1889 tells the many stories of this overwhelming transformation by entering into the lives, emotions, and decisions of Indians, miners, cowboys, women, and entrepreneurs who were cooperating and competing in the new state. Calling Egan’s book “the best kind of history,” Robert R. Swartout, Jr., professor emeritus of history at Carroll College in Helena, said Egan is “one of the most gifted Montana historians of our generation.”
The presentation will begin at noon and run about an hour at the Archives, 17 W. Quartz. Guests are encouraged to bring a sack lunch. Coffee and water will be provided. Brown Bag Lunches are held the second and fourth Wednesdays of every month. Upcoming lectures will focus topics of local interest. For more information, contact the Archives at 782-3280.
The Speculator Mine Disaster: 99 Years Later with Doug Ammons
On the anniversary of the Granite Mountain-Speculator fire, the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives will continue its Brown Bag Lunch series on Wednesday, June 8, with a presentation by Doug Ammons entitled The Speculator Mine Disaster: 99 Years Later, retelling the disaster based on the recently found Coroner’s Inquest. Using this eyewitness testimony, Ammons will present how the initial incident spiraled into catastrophe and the courage that unfolded thousands of feet below.
Doug Ammons is almost a Montana native, having been born in North Dakota during his family’s cross-country move to Missoula. He received a Doctorate in Experimental Psychology from the University of Montana, written two books, and participated in making adventure films for National Geographic, ESPN, and Outdoor Life. He writes and speaks about how we fit in the natural world, how we become experts in what we do, and how challenge and courage belong in our everyday lives.
Last Look at Butte, Why did the miners fight with management? then to Three Forks, Montana
0:24 inside downtown grocery store
0:46 looking up the face of a tall one
0:51 history read
0:55 how do you pronounce her name?
1:06 outside public archives building
2:24 ruins on display from riots?
2:36 reading history
3:06 Union factions and strife
3:37 Martial Law
4:13 courthouse
4:29 old church up the hill
4:41 reading
4:59 people having a picnic under the first copper mine
5:55 The Steward
6:09 no trespassing BSB
6:57 purple flowers
7:23 freeze proof drinking fountain
7:34 old message on house door
8:13 Anaconda Road
8:56 Butte Silver Bow Superfund Division
9:20 Butte hill directory
9:23 Lynching of Frank Little
9:55 temporary shelter is closed
10:28 Tuttle Building
14:09 nice Walmart seating area
15:08 bicycling in Three Forks
16:16 outside museum
17:14 inside museum
Bill Withers - Just the two of us
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Daily Roamer
Bum Doctor Acumagnet:
Copbait Travis
Marc Johnson talks about Senator Burton K. Wheeler
Four-term Senator Burton K. Wheeler was the most powerful politician Montana has ever produced says historian Marc C. Johnson who has authored the first-ever full-length biography of the controversial and consequential Democrat.
The University of Oklahoma Press recently published Political Hell-Raiser: The Life and Times of Senator Burton K. Wheeler. Johnson is the former chief of staff to long-time Idaho Governor Cecil D. Andrus and he has written extensively on American political history.
Wheeler came of political age amid antiwar and labor unrest in Butte during World War I. As a crusading United States attorney, he battled Montana’s powerful economic interests, championed farmers and miners, and won electionto the U.S. Senate in 1922 where he made his name as one of the “Montana scandalmongers,” uncovering corruption in the Harding and Coolidge administrations.
Drawing on extensive research and new archival sources – including the Butte-Silver Bow Archives – Johnson follows Wheeler from his early backing of Franklin D. Roosevelt and ardent support of the New Deal to his forceful opposition to Roosevelt’s plan to expand the Supreme Court and, in a move widely viewed as political suicide, his emergence as the most prominent spokesman against U.S. involvement in World War II right up to three days before Pearl Harbor.
“Butte was critical to Wheeler’s political development,” Johnson said. “Wheeler chose Butte as a place to begin his law practice in 1905, represented Silver Bow County in the state legislature, and served at U.S. Attorney from Butte. The city and county were always his political base and he absorbed the lessons of the place in a way that shaped his views about civil liberties and political dissent.”
Joseph T. Pardee: A Biography in Progress
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives continues its Brown Bag Lunch series with a presentation by historian Anne Millbrooke called “Joseph T. Pardee, a Biography in Progress.” Born in 1871, Joe Pardee moved in 1874 with his parents to Philipsburg, Montana. He grew up in Philipsburg, studied at the nearby College of Montana in Deer Lodge, then at the University of California in Berkeley. He opened an assay office, invested in mines, mined. He married a young woman from Philipsburg, and they had a daughter born in Stevensville. He became a government geologist employed by the U.S. Geological Survey. He spent field seasons in Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, and elsewhere. His work on glacial Lake Missoula changed the way geologists around the world think about regional flooding. He retired to Philipsburg, where he died in 1960. Many interesting stories fall between the lines of that brief chronological summary. The challenge is not only to find the stories but also to document the stories with sufficient detail and sound sources.
Anne Millbrooke was born in western Oregon and raised on the coast of Washington state. She went east to college, first to Boise State College in Idaho for a bachelor’s degree, then to the University of Wisconsin at Madison for a master’s degree, and finally to the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia for her doctorate. She studied history. She directed the Archive and Historical Resource Center at United Technologies Corporation, and thereby served as the historian for Pratt & Whitney, Hamilton Standard, Sikorsky, and other divisions of the corporation. She taught history at universities in Alaska, Connecticut, and Montana, and online for Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. She wrote the award-winning Jeppesen textbook Aviation History book and a 700-page reference book of Abbreviations, Alphabets and Acronyms of Aviation. Along the way, she has won Smithsonian, National Science Foundation, and NASA fellowships.
Brown Bag Lunch with Beth Judy on Bold Women in Montana's History
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives features a presentation by author Beth Judy about her new book, Bold Women in Montana History. Her presentation will remember the accomplishments of the Women's Protective Union, with readings from the chapter on that union. The fifteen-plus women portrayed in the book were indeed bold—breaking down barriers of sexism, racism, and political opposition to emerge as heroines of their time. The sixth book in Mountain Press’s state-by-state series for teen readers, Bold Women in Montana History reveals the feminine side of the Treasure State’s storied past.
Beth Judy grew up near Chicago and currently lives in Missoula. She received a BA from Harvard College. In 1992, she moved to Missoula and earned an MFA in creative writing at the University of Montana. From 1994 to 2014 she was a producer at Montana Public Radio, where she was known as “The Plant Detective.” As a freelance writer, Beth has written for “Prairie Home Companion” and Montana Magazine, among other publications. She loves history, traveling, nature, and her home in Montana.
Brown Bag Lunches are held the second and fourth Wednesdays of every month. Upcoming lectures will focus topics of local interest. For more information, contact the Archives at 782-3280.
The Rising Across the Ocean: The Transnational Links Between Ireland and the US in 1916
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives offers a presentation by Alan Noonan entitled The Rising across an Ocean: The Transnational links between Ireland and the US in 1916.
The events of the Easter Rising of 1916 center around the military struggle in Dublin and the execution of the leaders of the rebellion. The Proclamation of the Republic declared that the forces of the Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizens Army were “supported by her exiled children in America.” This included significant support from the copper city of Butte, Montana, six and a half thousand kilometers away. The seismic consequences of the Rising would be intimately felt in Butte, as well as Ireland. Strikes wracked the city as workers protested American support of Britain and the later eventual entry of the United States into the World War. The events sundered the once unified Irish-Americans in Butte and led to familiar charges of disloyalty and sedition being used against them from certain quarters. This presentation covers these tumultuous events and brings some formerly hidden aspects of history to light.
Alan Noonan is a scholar of mobility, labor, and culture in the 19th and 20th century . He holds an M.Phil and a Ph.D in history and he has been a Mellon Fellow at the Library Company in Philadelphia, a Smithsonian Fellow at the National Museum of American History, and is currently a Kluge Fellow at the Library of Congress where he is conducting research on the project “Unearthing Traditions: Poems, Songs, and Stories of Mining Communities throughout the United States.” His book Wandering Laborers: The Irish and Mining throughout the American West, 1849-1920 will be released in the spring by the University of Colorado Press.
Ex Navy Seal Who Killed Bin Laden Arrested
The former US Navy Seal who claims to have fired the shots that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has been arrested on a drunken driving charge.
Robert O'Neill was found by police asleep in a car parked at a convenience store in his Montana hometown.
Customers at the store called police to report a sleeping man behind the wheel of the running car around 2.30am, ButteSilver Bow County Undersheriff George Skuletich said.
An officer woke up the man, identified him as O'Neill and noticed odd behaviour.
He denied drinking and gave different stories about where he had been, Undersheriff Skuletich said.
O'Neill then failed a sobriety test at the scene and refused another test to find out his blood alcohol level, police said.
He was charged with driving under the influence, a misdemeanour.
O'Neill was released after posting a $685 bond, jail records show. It is the first time he has been arrested.
It is not clear whether he has hired an attorney.
O'Neill said in a statement released through a public relations firm that he took a prescribed sleep aid to help him with severe insomnia.
He added he is innocent of the charge and will plead not guilty. O'Neill also thanked officers for their professionalism and courtesy.
O'Neill first began publicly discussing his role in the 2011 raid that killed Bin Laden two years ago.
He told the Associated Press the American public had a right to know more details about the operation.
Pentagon officials have previously said it is not clear whose shots killed Bin Laden.
Montana | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Montana
00:01:28 1 Etymology and naming history
00:02:51 2 Geography
00:03:37 2.1 Topography
00:08:38 2.1.1 Rivers, lakes and reservoirs
00:09:25 2.1.1.1 Pacific Ocean drainage basin
00:10:22 2.1.1.2 Gulf of Mexico drainage basin
00:12:23 2.1.1.3 Hudson Bay drainage basin
00:12:46 2.1.1.4 Lakes and reservoirs
00:13:38 2.2 Flora and fauna
00:15:21 2.3 Protected lands
00:18:14 2.4 Climate
00:24:11 2.5 Antipodes
00:24:37 3 History
00:27:23 3.1 Montana territory
00:28:48 3.2 Conflicts
00:31:16 3.3 Cattle ranching
00:32:10 3.4 Railroads
00:33:48 3.5 Statehood
00:35:03 3.6 Homesteading
00:39:40 3.7 Montana and World War I
00:44:11 3.8 Depression era
00:44:41 3.9 Montana and World War II
00:46:42 3.10 Other military
00:47:38 3.11 Cold War Montana
00:48:57 4 Demographics
00:51:17 4.1 Intrastate demographics
00:55:11 4.2 Language
00:57:09 4.3 Religion
00:58:05 4.4 Native Americans
01:01:07 4.5 Birth data
01:01:34 5 Economy
01:03:33 6 Education
01:03:42 6.1 Colleges and universities
01:03:51 6.2 Schools
01:06:10 7 Culture
01:07:55 7.1 Major cultural events
01:09:27 7.2 Sports
01:09:35 7.2.1 Professional sports
01:10:08 7.2.2 College sports
01:10:42 7.2.3 Other sports
01:11:17 7.2.4 Olympic competitors
01:12:31 7.2.5 Sporting achievements
01:13:22 7.3 Outdoor recreation
01:13:46 7.3.1 Fishing and hunting
01:15:18 7.3.2 Winter sports
01:17:37 8 Health
01:18:08 9 Media
01:19:16 10 Transportation
01:21:33 11 Law and government
01:21:43 11.1 Constitution
01:25:31 11.2 State government: Executive
01:27:43 11.3 State government: Legislative
01:28:33 11.4 State government: Judicial
01:33:51 11.5 Federal offices and courts
01:37:26 12 Politics
01:41:07 13 Cities and towns
01:42:50 14 State symbols
01:46:23 15 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Montana ( (listen)) is a state in the Northwestern United States. Montana has several nicknames, although none are official, including Big Sky Country and The Treasure State, and slogans that include Land of the Shining Mountains and more recently The Last Best Place.Montana is the 4th largest in area, the 8th least populous, and the 3rd least densely populated of the 50 U.S. states. The western half of Montana contains numerous mountain ranges. Smaller island ranges are found throughout the state. In total, 77 named ranges are part of the Rocky Mountains. The eastern half of Montana is characterized by western prairie terrain and badlands. Montana is bordered by Idaho to the west, Wyoming to the south, North Dakota and South Dakota to the east, and the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan to the north.
The economy is primarily based on agriculture, including ranching and cereal grain farming. Other significant economic resources include oil, gas, coal, hard rock mining, and lumber. The health care, service, and government sectors also are significant to the state's economy.
The state's fastest-growing sector is tourism. Nearly 13 million tourists annually visit Glacier National Park, Yellowstone National Park, the Beartooth Highway, Flathead Lake, Big Sky Resort, and other attractions.
Montana | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Montana
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Montana ( (listen)) is a state in the Northwestern United States. Montana has several nicknames, although none are official, including Big Sky Country and The Treasure State, and slogans that include Land of the Shining Mountains and more recently The Last Best Place.Montana is the 4th largest in area, the 8th least populous, and the 3rd least densely populated of the 50 U.S. states. The western half of Montana contains numerous mountain ranges. Smaller island ranges are found throughout the state. In total, 77 named ranges are part of the Rocky Mountains. The eastern half of Montana is characterized by western prairie terrain and badlands. Montana is bordered by Idaho to the west, Wyoming to the south, North Dakota and South Dakota to the east, and the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan to the north.
The economy is primarily based on agriculture, including ranching and cereal grain farming. Other significant economic resources include oil, gas, coal, hard rock mining, and lumber. The health care, service, and government sectors also are significant to the state's economy.
The state's fastest-growing sector is tourism. Nearly 13 million tourists annually visit Glacier National Park, Yellowstone National Park, the Beartooth Highway, Flathead Lake, Big Sky Resort, and other attractions.
Ruan O'Donnell on the Fenians: the Irish revolutionary movement of 1867 and America
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives continued its Brown Bag Lunch series on Wednesday, December 13, with a presentation by Ruan O’Donnell entitled Fenians: The Irish revolutionary movement of 1867 and America.
Dr. Ruan O’Donnell, Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Limerick and Visiting Chair of Irish Studies, Notre Dame (2010-11), is the author of numerous books on the history of Irish republicanism. His new title Patrick Pearse has been acclaimed as the “definitive biography, using a wealth of primary sources [which] establishes as never before the significance of Pearse’s activism all across Ireland.” The book contains important new information on Pearse’s activities in the USA, where he was the public face of the 1916 Rising.
O’Donnell is Co-General Editor of the ground breaking “16 Lives” publication series which re-examines the political contribution of the sixteen Irish republicans executed by the British for involvement in the Easter Rising. A noted public speaker, O’Donnell is a member of the “Universities Ireland Decade of Commemoration Committee” and the Irish Manuscripts Commission. He is currently Fulbright Scholar in Residence at the University of Montana.
Brown Bag Lunches are held the second and fourth Wednesdays of every month. Upcoming lectures will focus topics of local interest. For more information, contact the Archives at 782-3280.
Matt Vincent talks about CryptoWatt
The Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives continues its Brown Bag Lunch series with a presentation by Matt Vincent titled An Introduction to CryptoWatt. Vincent gives a brief project overview to date of the company's headquarters and cryptocurrency mining facility at the former MSE Mike Mansfield Advanced Technology Center site. CryptoWatt purchased the former MSE site in January 2018 and brought on its first 3 megawatts of cryptocurrency mining capacity in March. Site construction continues with additional power and machines coming on line soon. Over 100 workers are currently employed in developing the site, with 50 or more long-term employees expected once construction is complete.
Matt Vincent is a Butte native and the former Chief Executive of Butte-Silver Bow City-County. He joined CryptoWatt in December 2017 and serves as their chief communications officer and spokesperson.
Stories from Montana County Courthouses with Eric Olson
From the Butte Archives:
Eric's Latest Book Courting Facts:
This presentation by attorney and author Eric Olson incorporates Montana history, true tales from Montana’s courthouses, and personal insights gained from his own experiences inside their courtrooms.
Since leaving the practice of law in 2014 Eric has driven the length and breadth of Montana, logging more than 30,000 miles, visiting every courthouse in the state, reading and researching thousands of court case files and newspaper articles and interviewing dozens of witnesses. The story-telling technique he employs in his four volume series of Montana Courthouse Tales is a unique and novel approach to history. As one reviewer put it, in these books ‘The History Channel’ meets ‘48 Hours.’
Eric Olson is a graduate of Wake Forest University and Gonzaga University School of Law. After obtaining his law license he began a professional journey which took him to Alaska, the Kona Coast of the Big Island of Hawaii, Memphis, Tennessee and, eventually to the Big Sky country of Montana. Over the course of a thirty-five year career as a trial lawyer he represented clients in cases as divergent and challenging as claims for veterans suffering from PTSD as a result of the Vietnam War, industrial accidents suffered by oilfield workers on Alaska’s North Slope, and labor grievances filed by state troopers, teachers, and others – not to mention a vast array of criminal cases involving charges up to and including first degree murder. Eric was the Chief Public Defender in Great Falls before becoming the first training coordinator for Montana’s statewide Public Defender system.
Redbone (band)
Redbone is a Native American rock group originated in the 1970s from brothers Pat and Lolly Vegas. They reached the Top 5 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1974 with their #1 hit single, Come and Get Your Love. The single went certified Gold selling over half a million copies. Redbone achieved hits with their singles The Witch Queen of New Orleans and Maggie in the U.S. but predominately overseas. Their legendary movement and message of peace still remains strong. Redbone is known and accredited in the NY Smithsonian as the first Native American rock/cajun group to have a #1 single internationally and in the United States.
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EPA promises transparency in Butte Superfund cleanup
EPA promises transparency in Butte Superfund cleanup
300 INCH 5 POINT KILLED WITH A BOW!!! COLORADO BACKCOUNTRY ELK HUNT - DAY 10
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