It Happened in Montana

It Happened in Montana
Author: James A. Crutchfield
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2016-12-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 149302356X

Author James A . Crutchfield has mined thirty-seven of the most colorful episodes from Montana's provocative past--from the first glimpse of French explorers of the "Shining Mountains" in 1743 to the attempt to round up the wild horses of the Pryor Mountains. These episodes are a lively look at life in the Wild West.

Roadside History of Montana

Roadside History of Montana
Author: Donald E. Spritzer
Publisher: Roadside History (Paperback)
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1999
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780878423958

The Roadside History series charts a course to the present through carefully selected and thoroughly researched stories relating what we see today with what happened before. Through vivid anecdotes, old photographs, and maps, the Roadside History guides provide entertaining insight into the states they describe.Each state is divided into geographical and historical regions, and each region is described in the context of highways that pass through it. This road log approach helps place modern travelers in the past.Roadside History of Montana goes well beyond cowboy stories to tell of some of Montana's most fascinating people, from the copper kings of Butte to the Freemen of Garfield County.

Montana Before History

Montana Before History
Author: Douglas H. MacDonald
Publisher: Mountain Press Publishing Company
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780878425853

Montana Before History, organized chronologically from the Paleoindian period to the Late Prehistoric period, details how Montana�s early peoples adapted to the rugged environment and several dramatic changes in climate.

Montana

Montana
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 686
Release: 1927
Genre:
ISBN:

Nothing to Tell

Nothing to Tell
Author: Donna Gray
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2012-05-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0762785748

Sitting at the kitchen tables of twelve women in their eighties who were born in or immigrated to Montana in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century, between 1982 and 1988 oral historian Donna Gray conducted interviews that reveal a rich heritage. In retelling their life stories, Gray steps aside and allows theses women with supposedly “nothing to tell” to speak for themselves. Pride, nostalgia, and triumph fill a dozen hearts as they realize how remarkable their lives have been and wonder how they did it all. Some of these women grew up in Montana in one-bedroom houses; others traveled in covered wagons before finding a home and falling in love with Montana. These raw accounts bring to life the childhood memories and adulthood experiences of ranch wives who were not afraid to milk a cow or bake in a wooden stove. From raising poultry to raising a family, these women knew the meaning of hard work. Several faced the hardships of family illness, poverty, and early widowhood. Through it all, they were known for their good sense of humor and strong sense of self.

Montana

Montana
Author: Michael P. Malone
Publisher: Seattle : University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 1976
Genre: Montana
ISBN: 9780295955209

Montana

Montana
Author: Kenneth Ross Toole
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1984-03-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780806118901

Perhaps once in a generation it is possible for a historian to reinterpret the long sweep of an area and a period in our history. K. Ross Toole has chosen Montana for this purpose, and the brilliant success of his achievement must be apparent to all who read these pages. He has consciously avoided a systematic presentation of the history of this "uncommon land," Instead, he has chosen to put the great and many of the smaller but significant episodes of a century and a half into new perspective. The record, in its colorful and romantic aspects, stretches from the days of Lewis and Clark; and in its more recent aspects, from the subjugation of the Indian to the predominance of big mining and timber enterprises. The resulting portrait is sharply drawn by a man who knows not only how to interpret the remote and recent past but how to write with great effect. Montana is best remembered by most Americans as the state in which the Indian played his last dramatic role with the annihilation of General George Armstrong Custer. But it was also the area in which the fur trade had its roots; where the sheepherders and the cattlemen vied with each other for the right to graze the land; where the "honyockers" tried-and often failed to master the land and the seasons; where copper interests have played a powerful role in politics and in the lives of the people; and where, only recently, the oil industry has followed the boom-and-bust cycle so well known in the state. This story of Montana points up particularly the position which is and has been occupied by the state in relation to the nation as a whole.

Finding the Bad Inn

Finding the Bad Inn
Author: Christy Leskovar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 346
Release: 2012-06-01
Genre: Authors
ISBN: 9780939872169

A behind-the-scenes look at how this former engineer morphed into a true-crime detective and ground level historian, while uncovering her family's story, which was told in the book One Night in a Bad Inn.

Montana's Indians

Montana's Indians
Author: William L. Bryan
Publisher: Farcountry Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781560370642

150 colorful photos and a chapter on each of Montana's reservations give readers a complete view of each of the ten tribes, past, present and future.

Montana Trivia

Montana Trivia
Author: Janet Spencer
Publisher: Riverbend
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2005-06
Genre: Games & Activities
ISBN: 9781931832601

When physicist Alan Sokal revealed that his 1996 article, "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity," published in Social Text, was a hoax, the ensuing scandal made the front page of the New York Times and caused an uproar among the post-modernists he had so hilariously--and convincingly--parodied. Now, in Beyond the Hoax, Sokal revisits this remarkable chapter in our intellectual history to illuminate issues that are with us even more pressingly today than they were a decade ago. Sokal's main argument, then and now, is for the centrality of evidence in all matters of public debate. The original article, (included in the book, with new explanatory footnotes), exposed the faulty thinking and outright nonsense of the postmodernist critique of science, which asserts that facts, truth, evidence, even reality itself are all merely social constructs. Today, right wing politicians and industry executives are happily manipulating these basic tenents of postmodernism to obscure the scientific consensus on global warming, biological evolution, second-hand smoke, and a host of other issues. Indeed, Sokal shows that academic leftists have unwittingly abetted right wing ideologies by wrapping themselves in a relativistic fog where any belief is as valid as any other because all claims to truth must be regarded as equally suspect. Sokal's goal, throughout the book, is to expose the dangers in such thinking and to defend a scientific worldview based on respect for evidence, logic, and reasoned argument over wishful thinking, superstition, and demagoguery of any kind. Written with rare lucidity, a lively wit, and a keen appreciation of the real-world consequences of sloppy thinking, Beyond the Hoax is essential reading for anyone concerned with the state of American culture today.