Montana 1864: Indians, Emigrants, and Gold in the Territorial Year
By Ken Egan
Paperback
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By Ken Egan
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In 1864, vast herds of buffalo roamed the northern short-grass prairie and numerous Native American nations lived on both sides of the adjacent Continental Divide. Lewis and Clark had come and gone, and so had most of the fur trappers and mountain men. The land that would become Montana was mostly still the wild and untrammeled landscape it had been for millennia.
That all changed in a single year—1864—because of gold, the Civil War, and the relentless push of white Americans into Indian lan...
That all changed in a single year—1864—because of gold, the Civil War, and the relentless push of white Americans into Indian lan...






















