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#world-history — Public Fediverse posts

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  1. On the night of July 3, 1901, a small band of outlaws stopped the Great Northern Coast Flyer near Wagner, Montana, and walked off with $40,000 in untraceable government bank notes. What followed — Pinkerton manhunts, arrests in four states, and a string of violent ends — was the final act of the Wild Bunch, America's most celebrated outlaw gang. Here's the real story.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/eve

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  2. They started with 49 students, borrowed classrooms, and $5 in the bank. Skeptics said an “Indian college” was a bad idea. They were wrong. Salish Kootenai College rose from a Ronan schoolhouse to launch an actual satellite into orbit — and graduated more Native students than all of Montana’s colleges combined over 125 years. This is how they did it.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/ins

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  3. Two ancient glacial boulders on Montana’s Hi-Line were sacred to a dozen Native nations for centuries. Then in 1932, a county decided to move them — and according to locals, the rocks weren’t happy about it. The story of the Sleeping Buffalo is part sacred history, part colonial land grab, and part Depression-era hustle. And it’s still unresolved.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/pla

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  4. He came to Helena with a law degree and left it with a national reputation no copper king could tarnish. Thomas J. Walsh spent twenty years in the U.S. Senate fighting for farmers, workers, and the rule of law – and then brought down the most corrupt administration of the twentieth century. This is the story of Montana’s most consequential senator.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  5. Before Missoula existed, a tiny frontier outpost called Hell Gate Ronde witnessed gold rush outlaws, midnight hangings, and rumors of buried treasure that have never been found. Did Cyrus Skinner’s gang hide stolen gold near the gallows before the vigilantes arrived? The legend is older than Montana itself — and the ground has never given up its secrets.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/mys

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  6. In 1853, Isaac Stevens led 200 men into uncharted Montana to find a railroad route to the Pacific — and changed the region forever. He mapped mountain passes with help from Blackfeet chiefs, collected unknown species, and set in motion treaties that reshaped Indigenous life. The survey that built the modern Northwest began here.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/eve

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  7. Before 1878, Montana had no college. What followed was a saga of frontier ambition, earthquake disaster, student-quarried sandstone, and three rival church schools that eventually merged into one. Rocky Mountain College in Billings carries nearly 150 years of unlikely survival — and the buildings its own students built still stand today.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/ins

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  8. From the copper mines of Butte, Montana, Robert Craig Knievel crashed motorcycles, broke 433 bones, became a national icon — then beat a man with a baseball bat and went broke. His life was as spectacular as his jumps and as brutal as his landings. This is the full, unvarnished story of Evel Knievel.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  9. Russell Harrison came to Montana in 1878 with a famous last name, a mining degree, and big ambitions. He ran the federal gold assay office, schemed in cattle country, bought a newspaper, got sued for libel, and watched his father become president — all from Helena. His Montana years were messy, ambitious, and revealing.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  10. Sam Hauser built Montana’s first bank, first smelter, and first major hydroelectric dam — then watched each collapse around him. Twice ruined, twice rebuilt, this territorial governor, cattle baron, and financial fraudster shaped a frontier territory with one hand while looting it with the other. His story is Montana’s story: ambitious, reckless, and impossible to look away from.
    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo
    #WorldHistory#USHistory#MTHistory#Montana#History#BSTS#Fourosix#MontanaToday#histodons

  11. Butte’s Columbia Gardens was Montana’s only major amusement park — a copper king’s political gift that became a community treasure. For 74 years, families rode carousels and swam in a mountain oasis. Then a corporation, an expanding pit mine, and a suspicious fire erased it forever. What remained? Grief, scattered relics, and unanswered questions.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/pla

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  12. Quaker lawyer meets copper kings. Joseph M. Dixon clawed his way from frontier Missoula to the U.S. Senate, ran Teddy Roosevelt’s legendary Bull Moose campaign, then waged war on Anaconda Copper as Montana’s governor — and lost his job while winning his biggest reform. A complicated legacy worth knowing.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  13. In June 1876, as Custer’s men died at the Little Bighorn, a steamboat captain made a legendary rescue dash down Montana’s Bighorn River — and may have buried a fortune in gold along the way. Or did he? The story has captivated treasure hunters for 150 years. But what does the historical record actually say? The answer is more interesting than the legend.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/mys

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  14. A sitting U.S. president laid the cornerstone. Earthquake rubble became a star-gazing observatory. A runaway train nearly took out a women’s dorm at 35 mph in minus-27 degree temps. Carroll College in Helena has survived a century of crises — and somehow kept growing. Here’s how Montana’s little Catholic college became one of the West’s best.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/ins

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  15. History of Latvia

    A Captivating Guide to Ancient Baltic Tribes, the Medieval Kingdoms of Livonia and Courland, Soviet Occupation, and Modern Times (European Countries) Discover the Untold Story of Latvia That Changes Everything Latvia’s history brims with courage, hurt, and profound survival. For centuries, its people faced relentless challenges, refusing to disappear. This account unveils their remarkable journey. Here’s just a fraction of what you can expect: The ancient roots of Latvia, with mighty […]

    reluctantretireebookreviews.co

  16. Before Montana had Hollywood, it had Where Rivers Rise — a vanished silent film from the early 1920s that may be the state's very first movie. Shot in the wild Flathead Valley, screened once in 1947, then swallowed by history. No reels. No cast. No plot. Just a title — and one tantalizing mystery.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/eve

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  17. In 1877, 800 Nez Perce men, women, and children — plus 2,000 horses — outwitted the U.S. Army through Yellowstone and down a cliff barely wide enough for two horses. Wyoming’s Chief Joseph Highway follows every mile of that desperate run for Canada. They came within 40 miles of freedom.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/pla

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  18. Born Carlo Giorgi in Italy, he reinvented himself as Irish boxer “Sonny O’Day” to crack a fight game rigged against Italians — then spent 55 years running the most legendary bar in Montana. 529 fights. One world championship bout in a town of 11,000. A life too wild to be fiction.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/peo

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  19. History of Spain

    A Captivating Guide to Spanish History, Starting from Roman Hispania through the Visigoths, the Spanish Empire, the Bourbons, and the ... to the Present (European Countries) If you want to discover the captivating history of Spain, then keep reading... Free History BONUS Inside! Throughout the centuries, Spain has been subject to the lordship of other countries. It was occupied by the ancient Greeks and Romans, the Visigoths, the French, and the Muslims. It has been the playground of […]

    reluctantretireebookreviews.co

  20. Confederate Gulch once held some of the richest gold deposits on the continent — miners pulled $1,000 from a single pan. So what's left? More than a century of hydraulic cannons, bucket dredges, and relentless prospecting later, the real answer might surprise you.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/mys

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  21. In the summer of 2000, a doctor on vacation spotted something strange in a Montana canyon wall. What he found would shatter paleontology's understanding of dinosaurs — a 77-million-year-old body, skin and all, still holding its last meal. Meet Leonardo, the world's most complete dinosaur mummy, and the small Hi-Line town that's been at the center of it all.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/eve

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  22. Before it was Montana Technological University, it was a single building on a hill in Butte — surrounded by the richest copper mines on Earth. Built on a statehood promise and open since 1900, Montana Tech has reinvented itself across 125 years without ever straying far from its roots. Here's how a mining school became a STEM powerhouse.

    Web:
    bigskytreasure.org/history/ins

    #WorldHistory #USHistory #MTHistory #Montana #History #BSTS #Fourosix #MontanaToday #histodons

  23. BUTTE, Mont. – Pekin Noodle Parlor, considered the longest consecutively operated family-run Chinese restaurant in America, is going out of business.

    The historic Butte-based noodle shop announced its closure on Facebook on Thursday. “After 115 incredible years, it is with heavy hearts that we announce the closing of the Pekin Noodle Parlor,” the Pekin Cafe account announced.

    Web:montanarightnow.com/butte/peki

    #WorldHistory#USHistory#MTHistory#Montana#History#BSTS#Fourosix
    #MontanaToday
    #histodons