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  2. History of Butte, Montana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Butte,_Montana

    History of Butte, Montana. Original Butte courthouse, 1885. A headframe overlooking Butte. Butte is a city in southwestern Montana established as a mining camp in the 1860s in the northern Rocky Mountains straddling the Continental Divide. Butte became a hotbed for silver and gold mining in its early stages, and grew exponentially upon the ...

  3. Butte, Montana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butte,_Montana

    Butte ( / bjuːt / BEWT) is a consolidated city-county and the county seat of Silver Bow County, Montana, United States. In 1977, the city and county governments consolidated to form the sole entity of Butte-Silver Bow. The city covers 718 square miles (1,860 km 2 ), and, according to the 2020 census, has a population of 34,494, making it ...

  4. Dumas Brothel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumas_Brothel

    Dumas Brothel. / 46.01143; -112.534372. The Dumas Brothel was a brothel in Butte, Montana. The brothel was founded by French-Canadian brothers Joseph and Arthur Nadeau in 1890 and named after the nominal owner, Delia Nadeau, née Dumas, who was Joseph's wife. It grew considerably through the years, with the miners employed by the city's copper ...

  5. Copper Kings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_Kings

    The Copper Kings were industrialists Marcus Daly, William A. Clark, James Andrew Murray and F. Augustus Heinze. They were known for the epic battles fought in Butte, Montana, and the surrounding region, during the Gilded Age, over control of the local copper mining industry, the fight that had ramifications for not only Montana, but the United ...

  6. History of Montana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Montana

    Mining headframes in Butte, MT Butte. Copper made Butte one of the most prosperous cities in the world, due to deposits dubbed "the Richest Hill on Earth". From 1892 through 1903, the Anaconda mine in Butte was the largest copper-producing mine in the world. It produced more than $300 million worth of metal in its lifetime.

  7. Speculator Mine disaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speculator_Mine_disaster

    Speculator Mine disaster. The Granite Mountain/Speculator Mine disaster of June 8, 1917, occurred as a result of a fire in a copper mine, and was the most deadly event in underground hard rock mining in United States history. Most men died of suffocation underground as the fire consumed their oxygen; a total of 168 miners were killed.

  8. Our Lady of the Rockies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady_of_the_Rockies

    Blessed Virgin Mary. Our Lady of the Rockies is a 90-foot (27 m) statue built in the likeness of Mary, the mother of Jesus, that sits atop the Continental Divide overlooking Butte, Montana, United States. It is the fourth-tallest statue in the United States after Birth of the New World, the Statue of Liberty, and the Pegasus and Dragon.

  9. 1914 Butte, Montana, labor riots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1914_Butte,_Montana,_labor...

    The Butte, Montana labor riots of 1914 were a series of violent clashes between copper miners at Butte, Montana. The opposing factions were the miners dissatisfied with the Western Federation of Miners local at Butte, on the one hand, and those loyal to the union local on the other. The dissident miners formed a new union, and demanded that all ...

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