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Bannack, Montana

Coordinates: 45°09′40″N 112°59′44″W / 45.16111°N 112.99556°W / 45.16111; -112.99556
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Bannack Historic District
Main street in Bannack
Bannack, Montana is located in Montana
Bannack, Montana
Bannack, Montana is located in the United States
Bannack, Montana
LocationBeaverhead County, Montana
Nearest cityDillon, Montana
Coordinates45°09′40″N 112°59′44″W / 45.16111°N 112.99556°W / 45.16111; -112.99556
Area1 mile (1.6 km)
Built1862
NRHP reference No.66000426
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Designated NHLDJuly 4, 1961[1]

Bannack is a ghost town in Beaverhead County, Montana, United States, located on Grasshopper Creek, approximately 11 miles (18 km) upstream from where Grasshopper Creek joins with the Beaverhead River south of Dillon. Founded in 1862, the town contemporarily operates as a National Historic Landmark and is managed by the state of Montana as Bannack State Park.[2]

History

Founded in 1862 and named after the local Bannock Indians, Bannack was the site of a major gold discovery in 1862, and served as the capital of Montana Territory briefly in 1864, until the capital was moved to Virginia City. Bannack continued as a mining town, though with a dwindling population. The last residents left in the 1970s.

At its peak, Bannack had a population of about ten thousand. Extremely remote, it was connected to the rest of the world only by the Montana Trail. There were three hotels, three bakeries, three blacksmith shops, two stables, two meat markets, a grocery store, a restaurant, a brewery, a billiard hall, and four saloons. Though all of the businesses were built of logs, some had decorative false fronts.

Among the town's founders was Dr. Erasmus Darwin Leavitt, a physician born in Cornish, New Hampshire, who gave up medicine for a time to become a gold miner. Dr. Leavitt arrived in Bannack in 1862, and alternately practiced medicine and mined for gold with pick and shovel. "Though some success crowned his labors," according to a history of Montana by Joaquin Miller, "he soon found that he had more reputation as a physician than as a miner, and that there was greater profit in allowing someone else to wield his pick and shovel while he attended to his profession." Subsequently, Dr. Leavitt moved on to Butte, Montana, where he devoted the rest of his life to his medical practice [3]

Bannack's sheriff, Henry Plummer, was accused by some of secretly leading a ruthless band of road agents, with early accounts claiming that this gang was responsible for over a hundred murders in the Virginia City and Bannack gold fields and trails to Salt Lake City. However, because only eight deaths are historically documented, some modern historians have called into question the exact nature of Plummer's gang, while others deny the existence of the gang altogether. In any case, Plummer and two compatriots, both deputies, were hanged, without trial, at Bannack on January 10, 1864. A number of Plummer's associates were lynched and others banished on pain of death if they ever returned. Twenty-two individuals were accused, informally tried, and hanged by the Vigilance Committee (the Montana Vigilantes) of Bannack and Virginia City.[4] Nathaniel Pitt Langford, the first superintendent of Yellowstone National Park, was a member of that vigilance committee.[5]

A number of mining camps dotted the banks of Grasshopper Creek during the gold booms, starting at Bannack downstream almost to where the stream joins Beaverhead River. While many were short lived and considered just extensions of Bannack, others were designated towns of their own. Yankee Flats adjoined Bannack and was referred to as an "addition" to Bannack. [6] Centerville and Marysville, about 1 mile downstream, were both laid out as little camps in the winter on 1862.[7] By the following March, a townsite company had laid out and platted Centerville.[8] However, Marysville, named for early arrival Mary Wadam, gained more people and so contemporary maps alternately used the name on record, Centerville, or the name used by locals, Marysville.[9] Dogtown was south of and "near" Bannack in 1866. It was named for the numerous stray dogs, and had a blacksmith shop, saloon, and grocery store.[9] Jerusalem (also New Jerusalem or Jerusalem Bar) was located two miles downstream of Bannack. Bon Accord, about 5 miles downstream, was a larger camp that saw a revival in the 1890s, and had a post office and school district. White's Bar, located possibly 10 miles downstream, was where John White and Company made the initial discovery of gold in 28 Jul 1862.[10]

State park

Sixty historic log, brick, and frame structures remain standing in Bannack, many quite well preserved; most can be explored. The site, now the Bannack Historic District, was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1961.[11][12] The town is presently the site of Bannack State Park. Though not particularly popular among tourists, this site remains a favorite for natives and historians alike.

Bannack Days

Every year, during the third weekend of July, this abandoned town witnesses a historical reconstitution known as "Bannack Days". For two days, Bannack State Park officials organize an event that attempts to revive the times when Bannack was a boom town, re-enacting the day-to-day lives of the miners who lived there during the gold rush. An authentic, old-fashioned breakfast is served in the old Hotel Meade, a well-preserved brick building which was for many years the seat of Beaverhead County, before Dillon, Montana, became the seat of the county.[13]

Physiography

The mines surrounding Bannack are located on both sides of Grasshopper Creek, which flows southeastward through the district and into the Beaverhead River about 12 miles (19 km) miles downstream.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Listing of National Historic Landmarks by State: Montana" (PDF). National Park Service. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 1, 2017. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  2. ^ "Bannack State Park". Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. Archived from the original on May 24, 2018. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  3. ^ Joaquin Miller (1894). "Erasmus Darwin Leavitt". History of Montana. USGENWEB Montana Archives. Archived from the original on 2012-02-26. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
  4. ^ Hough, Emerson (1907). The Story of the Outlaw. New York: The Outling Publishing Company. pp. 105–126.
  5. ^ Olin D. Wheeler (1915). "Speech to the Montana Historical Society, April 8, 1912". Nathaniel Pitt Langford: The Vigilante, the Explorer, the Expounder and First Superintendent of Yellowstone Park. Minnesota Historical Society. pp. 631–668.
  6. ^ "Unwritten Chapters in the Life of Henry Plummer". Augusta, Montana. The Augusta News. 23 Jan 1930. p. 7.
  7. ^ "John Henry Morley, who wrote daily reports of State, died 75 years ago". Helena, Montana. The Independent-Record. 10 Sep 1964. p. 20.
  8. ^ "On to Beaverhead". Great Falls, Montana. Great Falls Tribune. 2 Feb 1936. p. 14.
  9. ^ a b "Dogtown named because of many canines". Butte, Montana. The Montana Standard. 15 Aug 1964. p. 22.
  10. ^ Beaverhead County History Book Association (1990). "Beaverhead County Place Names". The History of Beaverhead County, Volume 1 1800-1920. Logan, Utah: Herff-Jones, Inc. pp. 6–18. ISBN 0-9625987-0-4.
  11. ^ "Bannack Historic District". NPGallery. National Park Service. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  12. ^ Blanche Higgins Schroer (September 1975). "Bannack Historic District". National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form. National Park Service. and Accompanying 11 photos, from 1975.
  13. ^ "Bannack Days". Bannack State Park and Bannack Association. Archived from the original on September 28, 2016. Retrieved July 21, 2012.
  14. ^ Spectrum Engineering & Abandoned Mine Reclamation Bureau Montana 1992, p. 1.

Bibliography

  • Spectrum Engineering; Abandoned Mine Reclamation Bureau Montana (1992). Bannack State Park Project. Billings, Montana: Montana State Library. p. 194.