Montana Woman

Montana Woman
Author: f. rosanne Bittner
Publisher: Fanfare
Total Pages: 422
Release: 1990
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780553283198

From the ashes of bloody Lawrence, Kansas, where she was forced to kill a man to save her own life, Joline Masters knew her destiny lay on the American frontier. Joining her fate to that of Clint Reeves, she battled Indians, struggled against natural and man-made disasters and found a love with a man still fighting ghosts from his past.

Montana Women Homesteaders

Montana Women Homesteaders
Author: Sarah Carter
Publisher: Farcountry Press
Total Pages: 299
Release: 2009
Genre: History
ISBN: 1560374497

By shedding light on Montana's first women homesteaders--determined 19th- and early 20th-century pioneers--Carter reveals inspiring stories filled with joy, tragedy, and redemption.

The Montana Frontier

The Montana Frontier
Author: Joyce Litz
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2004-04-15
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 082633122X

This true story of a Victorian-era young woman who follows her husband to a small town with the improbable name of Gilt Edge, Montana, will remind readers of Wallace Stegner's Angle of Repose, the classic novel of a woman's life in the Mountain West. As a young girl, Lillian Weston, the author's grandmother, aspired to be a concert pianist. However, as a young woman in turn-of-the-century New York, she became a newspaper columnist. Her marriage to Frank Hazen took her west in 1899, ending her career as a newspaperwoman. She turned her writing skills to journals, diaries, stories, and poems, which traced her family's life on a frontier that was no longer unspoiled. The Hazens endured brutal winters and dry summers and endeavored to raise cattle and chickens by trial and error. Lillian was an assiduous diarist who included details of her turbulent marriage challenged by Frank's bad business deals. The details of birth control and child rearing, gambling and prostitution, education and health care are all part of this story, offering glimpses into everyday life that often go unreported in the larger story of western expansion.

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.

Pioneer Doctor

Pioneer Doctor
Author: Mari Grana
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 363
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0762751940

When Mollie stepped off the train in Salt Lake City, Utah, in 1890, she knew she had to start a new life. She'd left her husband and his medical practice behind in Iowa, and with only a few hundred dollars in her pocket and a great deal of pride, she set out to find a new position as a physician. She was offered a job as a doctor to the miners in Bannack, Montana, and thus began her epic adventures as a pioneer doctor, a suffragette, and a crusader for public health reform in the Rocky Mountain West. Pioneer Doctor: The Story of a Woman's Work is the true story of Dr. Mary (Mollie) Babcock Atwater, a medicine woman who found freedom and opportunity in the wide-open spaces of America's frontier west. This remarkable tale has been creatively retold here by her granddaughter, award-winning author Mari Grana. Blending information from historical records as well as interviews with family and friends, the author has reconstructed Mollie's steps into a dramatic narrative that brings to life the doctor's struggles, her accomplishments, and the times in which she lived. Beautifully written and thoroughly researched, this is not just the biography of a fascinating woman. It is also the story of an era when daring women ventured forth and changed history for the rest of us.

Montana Women Writers

Montana Women Writers
Author: Caroline Patterson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2006
Genre: American literature
ISBN: 9781560374053

Winner of the Willa Award for Creative Nonfiction, 2007. Silver Medal, ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year Awards, Anthologies category, 2006.

Bold Women in Montana History

Bold Women in Montana History
Author: Beth Judy
Publisher: Bold Women
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre: Young Adult Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780878426768

From the Blackfeet warrior Running Eagle to the stereotype-smashing librarian Alma Jacobs, these eleven women were indeed bold, breaking down barriers of sexism, racism, and political opposition to emerge as heroines of their time. We meet Annie Morgan, a Philipsburg homesteader whose mysterious life is only now coming to light; the bronc-riding Greenough sisters, Alice and Marge, who became rodeo stars during the sport's heydey; and Jeannette Rankin, America's first Congresswoman.

The Girl from Montana

The Girl from Montana
Author: Grace Livingston Hill
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1908
Genre: Christian life
ISBN: 1465515933

A young girl flees from Montana and a man she fears to her grandparents in the East.

Deliverance Mary Fields, First African American Woman Star Route Mail Carrier in the United States

Deliverance Mary Fields, First African American Woman Star Route Mail Carrier in the United States
Author: Miantae Metcalf McConnell
Publisher: HUZZAH PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 532
Release: 2016-09-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 0997877006

1885-1914. Mary Fields, a fifty-three-year old second-generation slave, emancipated and residing in Toledo, receives news of her friend's impending death. Remedies packed in her satchel, Mary rushes to board the Northern Pacific. She arrives in the Montana wilderness to find Mother Mary Amadeus lying on frozen earth in a broken-down cabin. Certain that the cloister of frostbit Ursuline nuns and their students, Indian girls rescued from nearby reservations, will not survive without assistance, Mary decides to stay.She builds a hennery, makes repairs to living quarters, cares for stock, and treks into the mountains to provide food. Brushes with death do not deter her. Mary drives a horse and wagon through perilous terrain and blizzards to improve the lives of missionaries, homesteaders and Indians and, in the process, her own.After weathering wolf attacks, wagon crashes and treacherous conspiracies by scoundrels, local politicians and the state's first Catholic bishop, Mary Fields creates another daring plan. An avid patriot, she is determined to register for the vote. The price is high. Will she manifest her personal vision of independence?MCCONNELL'S RESEARCH enabled USPS to verify Mary Fields as the first African American woman star route mail carrier in the U.S. A chronicle of Fields' life in Montana from 1885 until her death in 1914, the narrative examines women rights, bootleg politics, Montana's turn-of-the-century transition from territory to state and its scandalous 1914 woman suffrage election.SHORT-LISTED 2015 LARAMIE AWARDMcConnell fashioned a historical narrative marrying prose and poetry, fact with creative writing. With the discerning eye of a photographer, the deft hand of a historian, and the literary heart of a poet, the life of Mary Fields, legendary black woman of Montana, rises off the page into living history. If the reader has any interest in Mary Fields, aka Stagecoach Mary, Deliverance is the one book you must read.--Cowboy Mike Searles, Author, Professor of History, Augusta University, GA.A great story and history of Mary Fields, an important back westerner. A must read for youths and adults. --Bruce A. Glasrud, Author, Professor, California State University.