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Society of Montana Pioneers

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Society of Montana Pioneers
SuccessorSons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers
FormationSeptember 11, 1884; 140 years ago (1884-09-11)
Websitewww.sonsanddaughtersmontanapioneers.com

The Society of Montana Pioneers was founded on September 11, 1884 in Helena, Montana to honor and document the histories of Montana pioneers who were resident in the territory at the time it became a Montana Territory, May 26, 1864.[1] In 1909, the society changed its membership rules to admit pioneers who were resident the territory prior to December 31, 1868.[2] In 1899, the society boasted 1536 active members out of a one time total of 1808.[3] The society did not consider individuals who were assigned to Montana on military duties, individuals who were deemed outlaws such as Henry Plummer of Bannack, or Indians as eligible for membership in the society.[4]

On August 18, 1892, a junior society was founded—The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers—to perpetuate the tradition of the pioneers by their progeny.[5]

History

In the summer of 1884, many Montana pioneers were unsatisfied with the Montana Historical Society and its more formal approach to the preservation of Montana History. In response, they decided to form a more populist society and made this call:

It having been suggested and urged by a large number of the Pioneers of Montana that the undersigned issue a call for the assembly of the Pioneers of Montana for the purpose of organizing a Pioneers' Association or Society, the task is heartily undertaken under the belief that it will bring forth good fruit. I have been unable, thus far, to see or hear from many of the Pioneers, and in appending their names to the call I do it from the fact that I am personally acquainted with nearly all of them, and by virtue of acquaintance take the liberty of using their names. To Col. W. F. Sanders, of Helena, Hon. Washington Stapleton, of Butte, and Hon. Joe A. Browne, of Darling, I am under obligations for timely suggestions. To Captain Mills, of the Deer Lodge, New North West, I am indebted for timely hints. The brethren of the Territorial Press will contribute toward the success of organizing a Pioneers' Association by giving the following call as much publicity as in their judgment may seem most meet and proper.

— John Russell Wilson. Dillon, Montana, July 26th, 1884.[1]

By September 1884, sufficient numbers of pioneers had committed to forming the society. A meeting was scheduled on September 10, 1884 at the Court House in Helena, Montana. Sixty-six pioneers from eleven Montana counties signed the notice.

County societies

Society members living in Montana counties with a large number of members formed local county societies.

  • Pioneers' Society of Beaverhead County–1887
  • Gallatin County Pioneer Society No. 1–November 23, 1893
  • Jefferson County Society of Pioneers of the State of Montana–December 10, 1897
  • Lewis and Clarke [sic] County Society of Montana Pioneers–1897
  • Pioneer Society of Madison County–1888
  • The Teton County Society of Montana Pioneers–January 23, 1895

Officers

1884–1899[6] 1900–1961[7]

  • 1884
  • 1885
    • President: Walter W. DeLacy
    • Recording Secretary: John Russell Wilson
    • Corresponding Secretary: Cornelius Hedges[8]
  • 1886
  • 1887
    • President: Frank H. Woody
    • Secretary: James U. Sanders
    • Treasurer: Samuel T. Hauser
  • 1888
  • 1889
    • President: Anton M. Holter
    • Secretary: Cornelius Hedges
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1890
    • President: William A. Clark
    • Secretary: Cornelius Hedges
    • Treasurer: Henry M. Parchen
  • 1891
    • President: Samuel Word
    • Secretary: Cornelius Hedges
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1892
    • President: Walter Cooper
    • Secretary: Charles D. Curtis
    • Treasurer: Cornelius Hedges
  • 1893
    • President: Walter Cooper
    • Secretary: Charles D. Curtis
    • Treasurer: Cornelius Hedges
  • 1894
    • President: John T. Conner
    • Secretary: Charles D. Curtis
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1895
    • President: Conrad Kohrs
    • Secretary: Theophilus Muffly
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1896
    • President: William L. Steele
    • Secretary: Theophilus Muffly
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1897
    • President: Nickolas Kessler
    • Secretary: Theophilus Muffly
    • Treasurer: Theodore H. Kleinschmidt
  • 1898
    • President: Henry Elling
    • Secretary: James U. Sanders
    • Treasurer: Anton M. Holter
  • 1899
    • President: Henry Elling
    • Secretary: James U. Sanders
    • Treasurer: Anton M. Holter
  • 1900–President: Henry F. Edgar
  • 1901–President: Augustus F. Graeter
  • 1902–President: Timothy E. Collins
  • 1903–President: O'Dillon Whitford
  • 1904–President: Cornelius Hedges
  • 1905–President: John P. Thomas
  • 1906–President: Paul McCormick
  • 1907–President: Charles S. Warren
  • 1908–President: Andrew J. Fisk
  • 1909–President: Warren C. Gillette[8]
  • 1910–President: William Y. Pemberton
  • 1911–President: Rod D. Leggat
  • 1912–President: Mortimer H. Lott
  • 1913–President: Martin Maginnis
  • 1914–President: James M. Page
  • 1915–President: John W. Blair
  • 1916–President: George W. Morse
  • 1917–President: Frank D. Brown
  • 1918–President: Charles W. Hoffman
  • 1919–President: William A. Clark
  • 1920–President: John F. Bishop
  • 1921–President: Charles W. Cook[9]
  • 1922–President: William A. Coleman
  • 1923–President: Richard Lockey
  • 1924–President: Thomas R. Moore
  • 1925–President: Mary Valiton
  • 1926–President: Alfred W. Orton
  • 1927–President: Patrick Carney and Mrs. M. F. Trask
  • 1928–President: Wylls A. Hedges
  • 1929–President: Molly Kline
  • 1930–President: David Heilgn
  • 1931–President: W. C. Cerron
  • 1932–President: Miles Cavanaugh
  • 1933–President: Merling Held
  • 1934–President: Henry Evans
  • 1935–President: Augusta Trask
  • 1936–President: Andrew Erickson
  • 1937–President: John H. Miller
  • 1938–President: Will Cave
  • 1940–President: Jeannie Ennis Chowing
  • 1941–President: Mary Evans
  • 1942–President: Joseph Larson
  • 1943–President: Joseph Larson
  • 1944–President: Augusta Trask
  • 1945–President: William L. Milligan
  • 1946–President: Henry M. Morgan
  • 1947–President: William K. Burns
  • 1948–President: Julia R. Elledge
  • 1949–President: Mary Doane (wife of Gustavus Cheyney Doane)
  • 1950–President: Byron Wickham
  • 1951–President: Lumen W. Allen
  • 1952–President: Tom H. McCauley
  • 1953–President: Fannie Davis Ennis
  • 1954–President: Fannie Davis Ennis
  • 1955–President: Helen Allen Conrad
  • 1956–President: Henry R. Daems
  • 1957–President: Julie Mae Stock
  • 1958–President: Julie Mae Stock
  • 1959–President: Josephine Gilg
  • 1960–President: Luman Allen
  • 1961–President: Luman Allen

Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers

On August 18, 1892 during their annual meeting, the Montana Pioneers established The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers as a society to preserve the legacy of the original pioneers.[2] Membership in the society is open to any linear descendants of the original members of the Society of Montana Pioneers. The Sons and Daughters Society was instrumental in obtaining land for the construction of the Veterans and Pioneer Memorial Building at the state capitol in Helena.[10] The records of both societies are maintained there.

Publications

In 1899, James U. Sanders, long-time secretary of the society[11] and the Montana Historical Society librarian organized the publication of Volume I of Society of Montana Pioneers-Constitution, Members, Officers with Portraits and Maps...... The volume details the foundation of the society, lists the officers up to 1898 along with details of the various country societies. It includes short biographical sketches of members from each county. Other than short newspaper articles, the society did not publish another volume.

George Frederick Cope, son of Charles and Caroline Cope; born at Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri, March i6th, 1842. Place of departure for Montana, Black Hawk, Colorado; route traveled, across the plains, up North Platte, Green River, Fort Bridger, Soda Springs, and Snake River; arrived at Bannack July 4th, 1863. Occupation, miner. Residence, Bon Accord. Member House of Representatives, Sixth Session, 1869-70, Territorial Legislative Assembly.

— Typical biographical sketch

In 2001, under the editorial leadership of Linda Wostrel, Historian of The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers, a volume of 91 biographical remembrances was published under the title: Dreams Across The Divide-Stories of Montana Pioneers with a forward by Stephen Ambrose, author of Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West (1996).

Dissolution

On August 24–25, 1962 during their 78th annual meeting, held in Butte, the eight surviving members of the society and The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers elected to dissolve the original society. Lumen W. Allen, the last survivor of the Society of Montana Pioneers died on February 19, 1970 at the age of 102 in Butte.[2]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Sanders, James U., ed. (1899). "Preface". Society of Montana Pioneers-Constitution, Members, Officers with Portraits and Maps... (PDF). Montana Society of Pioneers. pp. xvii–xx.
  2. ^ a b c Wostrel, Linda, ed. (2001). "The Society of Montana Pioneers ...1884 to today". Dreams Across the Divide-Stories of Montana Pioneers. Stevensville, MT: Stoneydale Press Publishing Company. pp. 13–29. ISBN 1931291136.
  3. ^ Sanders, James U., ed. (1899). "Recapitulation". Society of Montana Pioneers-Constitution, Members, Officers with Portraits and Maps... (PDF). Montana Society of Pioneers. p. 249.
  4. ^ Clyde A. Milner, II (Winter 1987). "The Shared Memory of Montana Pioneers". Montana: The Magazine of Western History. 37 (1). Montana Historical Society: 2–139. JSTOR 4519027.
  5. ^ "A Short Instruction in Historical Beginnings". The Sons and Daughters of Montana Pioneers. Retrieved 2013-02-09.
  6. ^ Sanders, James U., ed. (1899). "State Society Officers". Society of Montana Pioneers-Constitution, Members, Officers with Portraits and Maps... (PDF). Montana Society of Pioneers. pp. xxi–xxvi.
  7. ^ Wostrel, Linda, ed. (2001). "Society of Montana Pioneers Presidents". Dreams Across the Divide-Stories of Montana Pioneers. Stevensville, MT: Stoneydale Press Publishing Company. p. 444. ISBN 1931291136.
  8. ^ a b Member of Washburn–Langford–Doane Expedition to Yellowstone in 1870
  9. ^ Member of Cook–Folsom–Peterson Expedition to Yellowstone in 1869
  10. ^ Lobel, Lester H. (January 1951). "The History of the Montana Veterans and Pioneers Memorial Building". Montana-The Magazine of Western History. 1 (1). Montana Historical Society: 15–21. JSTOR 4515708.
  11. ^ Hilger, David (May 9, 1923). MacDonald, Elizabeth (ed.). "In Memoriam James U. Sanders". Contributions to the Montana Historical Society. XI. Montana Historical Society: 22–28.