Official name | City of Missoula, Montana |
---|---|
Settlement type | City |
Nickname | The Garden City, Zoo Town |
Motto | "The Discovery Continues", "A place, sort of." |
Image alt | Downtown Missoula |
Image seal | Missoula City logo.png |
Map caption | Location of Missoula in Montana |
Mapsize1 | 225px |
Map caption1 | location of Missoula County |
Image map1 | Map of USA MT.svg |
Subdivision type | Country |
Subdivision name | United States |
Subdivision type1 | State |
Subdivision name1 | Montana |
Subdivision type2 | County |
Subdivision name2 | Missoula |
Leader title | Mayor-council government |
Leader name | John Engen (D) |
Leader title1 | Governing body |
Leader name2 | City Council |
Established title | Founded |
Established date | 1866 |
Area total sq mi | 23.9 |
Area total km2 | 61.9 |
Area land sq mi | 23.8 |
Area land km2 | 61.6 |
Area water sq mi | 0 |
Area water km2 | 0 |
Area urban km2 | 94.2 |
Population as of | 2010 |
Population total | 66788 |
Population metro | 109299 |
Population density sq mi | 2795 |
Population county | 108,623 |
Population demonym | Missoulian |
Timezone | Mountain |
Utc offset | -7 |
Timezone dst | Mountain |
Utc offset dst | -6 |
Coordinates display | inline,title |
Coordinates type | region:US_type:city |
Elevation m | 978 |
Elevation ft | 3209 |
Website | www.ci.missoula.mt.us |
Area code | 406 |
Postal code type | ZIP code |
Postal code | 59801, 59802, 59803, 59804, 59806, 59807, 59808 |
Postal2 code type | U of M ZIP code |
Postal2 code | 59812 |
Area code | 406 |
Blank name | FIPS code |
Blank info | 30-50200 |
Blank1 name | GNIS feature ID |
Blank1 info | 0787504 |
Blank2 name | Highways |
Blank2 info | |
Footnotes | }} |
Missoula was founded in 1860 as Hellgate Trading Post before being renamed Missoula Mills ("Missoula" from the Salish name for the area, "Nemissoolatakoo", and "Mills" after the prosperous flour mill and sawmill that served as Missoula's first industry). "Mills" was dropped from the name and in 1877, the establishment of Fort Missoula ensured the survival of the city.
Missoula is nicknamed the "Garden City", in reference to the large number of orchard homes that once lined its periphery and an extensive vegetable and flower garden owned by Cyrus and William McWhirk that formed the eastern entrance to the city.Downtown Missoula is the central business district of the of the city. Though founded as a lumber and agricultural center as well as a trading post, the basis of Missoula's modern economy is the University of Montana, government, healthcare, tourism, and the service industry.
Missoula is a college town, dominated by the University of Montana which accounts for nearly one fourth of the city's population. Missoula is also known for being the birthplace of Jeannette Rankin, the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress. Missoula is the headquarters of Montana Rail Link and home to Montana's largest brewery.
The oldest artifacts date from the end of the glacial lake period around 12,000 years ago with the first-known settlements dating from 3,500 BCE. From the 1700s until European settlement, the region was used by Salish, Kootenai, Pend d'Oreille, Blackfoot, and Shoshone tribes.
As a natural corridor through the mountains, the valley was the scene of great conflict between local Native American tribes and those traversing the region to and from Montana's eastern plains, which were rich with buffalo. The narrow valley at Missoula's eastern entrance was so strewn with human bones from repeated ambushes that French fur trappers would later refer to this area as "Porte d' Enfer," translated as "Hell's Gate". Hell Gate would remain the name of the area until it was renamed "Missoula" in 1866.
The region was first surveyed by Washington Territory governor Isaac Stevens in the 1850s by Congressional request as a means of developing a transcontinental rail route. Stevens would also negotiate the Treaty of Hellgate through which the Native American tribes of western Montana relinquished their territories to the U.S. government. Stevens was assisted by Lieutenant John Mullan who would build the Mullan Road in 1853. The wagon road was the first to cross the Rocky Mountains to the inland of the Pacific Northwest, and would enable the establishment of Fort Missoula in 1877.
The Missoula Mills replaced Hell Gate Village as the economic power of the valley and replaced it as the county seat in 1866. The name "Missoula" comes from the Salish name for the Clark Fork River, which runs through the city. The name ‘’nmesuletkʷ’’, though often mistakenly believed to translate as "River of Ambush" as a reflection of the inter-tribal fighting common to the area, actually has the approximate meaning of "place of freezing/cold liquid", or more roughly "cold water" (cf. Interior Salishan locative marker n-, Southern Interior Salishan sul, 'cold/frozen', and -etkʷ, 'liquid'). This name is thought by some Salish tribal members to refer to Glacial Lake Missoula.
By the 1880s growth had slowed, but the arrival of the Northern Pacific Railway in 1883 caused growth to accelerate again and Territorial Governor Benjamin F. Potts approved a charter for the Town of Missoula. The need for lumber for the railway and its bridges spurred the opening of multiple saw mills in the area and, in turn, the beginning of Missoula's lumber industry. The economic frenzy led to the construction of many of the historic buildings in downtown today. In particular, architect A. J. Gibson arrived in the late 1880s and designed many of Missoula's most recognizable buildings, including the Missoula County Courthouse and the University of Montana's Main Hall.
In the 1930s, Missoula was able to obtain fourteen Civil Works Administration projects that helped build the airport, Orange Street Bridge, several schools, and four major buildings at the university.
Logging remained a mainstay of industry in Missoula with the groundbreaking of the Hoerner-Waldorf pulp mill in 1956, which led to subsequent protests over the resultant air pollution. In 1979, almost 40% of the county's labor income came from the wood and paper products sector. By the early 1990s, however, many of the region's log yards, along with legislation, had cleaned the skies, though the valley's topography still makes the city susceptible to lingering smoke from forest fires and winter smog.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 23.9 square miles (61.9 km²), of which 23.8 square miles (61.6 km²) is land and 0.1 square miles (0.3 km²) (0.46%) is water. Missoula is located in a deep valley in the western part of the state, near where the Clark Fork River is joined by the Bitterroot and Blackfoot Rivers.
Evidence of the city of Missoula's lake bottom past can be seen in the form of ancient wave-cut shorelines that can now be seen as horizontal lines on nearby mountains Mount Sentinel and Mount Jumbo. At the location of present-day University of Montana, the lake once had a depth of .
The surrounding terrain also gives Missoula its moniker of being the "Hub of Five Valleys" in reference to the five mountain ranges and valleys that converge in the valley: The Bitterroot Mountains, Sapphire Range, Garnet Range, Rattlesnake Mountains, and the Reservation Divide.
The rivers around Missoula provide nesting habitats for bank swallows, northern rough-winged swallows and belted kingfishers. Killdeer and spotted sandpipers can be seen foraging insects along the gravel bars. Other species include song sparrows, catbirds, several species of warblers, and the pileated woodpecker.
The rivers also provide cold, high quality water for native fish such as westslope cutthroat trout and bull trout. The meandering streams also attract beaver and wood ducks.
Missoula is also unfortunately home to several noxious weeds which multiple programs have set out to eliminate. Notable ones include dalmatian toadflax, spotted knapweed, leafy spurge, St. John's wort, and sulfur cinquefoil.
The city primarily follows a standard north-south grid pattern, though newer subdivisions and residential areas located on hills often do not follow the established pattern. Notable exceptions to the grid pattern are Downtown where the grid follows the contour of the river and a section of the Rose Park Neighborhood where the grid instead aligns with Brooks St. (Highway 12), one of only two arterials (the other being Stephens Ave.) to traverse the city diagonally. The Bitterroot Branch of Montana Rail Link also traverses Missoula diagonally south of the river while the main branch as well as Interstate-90 move with the river and hill's terrain north of the Clark Fork.
Neighborhood !! General Location within Missoula!! Notable Features | ||
Captain John Mullan | Northwest, South of the railroad | More commonly known as the west side of North Reserve. This is part of Missoula's "Big-box store''" district with an adjacent housing development. |
Fairviews/ Pattee Canyon | Extreme Southeast hills and canyon | |
Franklin to the Fort | ||
Grant Creek | Northeast, North of the railroad | |
Downtown Missoula | Heart of Missoula | Downtown |
Lewis and Clark | ||
Lower Rattlesnake | Northeast, Just north of the railroad | |
Miller Creek | Extreme Southwest Hills | |
Moose Can Gully | Southwest Hills | |
Northside | North Central, North of the railroad | |
Riverfront | North Central, South of the river | |
River Road | West, Just south of the river | |
Rose Park | Central | |
South 39th St. | Southwest | |
Southgate Triangle | Central, south of the railroad | |
University District | East | |
Upper Rattlesnake | Extreme Northeast | |
Westside | Northwest, North of the river, South of the railroad |
It is one of the largest metropolitan area between Boise, Idaho, and Calgary, Alberta, Canada, and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and Billings, Montana. It is also the second largest media market in the state of Montana, and also has one of the best Health care facility programs in its surrounding area.
The 2010 Census put Missoula's population at 66,788. There currently are 57,053 people, 24,141 households, and 12,336 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,397.1 people per square mile (925.6/km²) in 2000. There were 25,225 housing units at an average density of 1,059.8 per square mile (409.2/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 93.57% White, 2.35% Native American, 1.23% Asian, 0.36% African American, 0.10% Pacific Islander, 0.51% from other races, and 1.87% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.76% of the population.
There were 24,141 households out of which 24.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 37.9% were married couples living together, 10.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 48.9% were non-families. 33.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 8.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.23 and the average family size was 2.88.
In the city the population was spread out with 19.7% under the age of 18, 20.7% from 18 to 24, 29.4% from 25 to 44, 19.8% from 45 to 64, and 10.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 30 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.1 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $30,366, and the median income for a family was $42,103. Males had a median income of $30,686 versus $21,559 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,166. About 11.7% of families and 19.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 20.5% of those under age 18 and 9.3% of those age 65 or over. 40.3% of Missoula residents age 25 and older have a bachelor's or advanced college degree.
Timber demand for the railroad lead to the setting up of numerous saw mills, which were gradually consolidated, and the lumber industry remained important to the Missoula economy for much of the 20th century.
Today, Missoula's economy has diversified with Education, health care, retail, government, and professional services all playing an important part in the economy at large. In particular, the University of Montana is the region's largest employer, while St. Patrick Hospital and the Community Medical Center follow making Missoula the regional medical center.
Missoula is also a regional economic center; as of 2006 one survey showed Missoula as having a primary trade area of 100,086 and a secondary trade area of 93,272..
Missoula Payroll Employment Numbers | ||||||
Employment!!Sector!!Subsector!!!!2009# employed!!% of Missoula jobs!!% of sector!!Annual Percentage Change | ||||||
Total | |||54,348|| | 100% | ||||
Construction | | | 2,794 | 5% | |||
| | Specialty Trade Contractors | |1,438|| | 3% | 51%|||
Manufacturing | | | 2,187 | 4% | |||
| | Durable Goods Manufacturing | |1,000|| | 2% | 46%|||
| | Nondurables Manufacturing | |1,187|| | 2% | 54%|||
Wholesale Trade | | | 1,862 | 3% | |||
Retail Trade | | | 7,917 | 15% | |||
| | Auto Dealers | |908|| | 2% | 11%|||
| | Building Material Dealers | |794|| | 1% | 10%|||
Transportation and Warehousing | | | 1,690 | 3% | |||
| | Truck Transportation | |649|| | 1% | 38%|||
Information | | | 1,153 | 2% | |||
Finance and Insurance | | | 1,784 | 3% | |||
Real Estate | | | 766 | 1% | |||
Professional and Business Services | | | 6,523 | 12% | |||
Educational Services | | | 2,540 | 5% | |||
Health Care | | | 8,680 | 16% | |||
| | Ambulatory Health Care | |2,852|| | 5% | 33% | 5.8 | |
| | Social Assistance | |1,966|| | 4% | 23% | 6.5 | |
Arts, Entertainment and Recrecation | | | 1,416 | 3% | |||
Accommodation and Food Services | | | 5,906 | 11% | |||
| | Accommodations | |1,319|| | 2% | 22%|||
| | Food Services | |4,588|| | 8% | 78%|||
Other Services | | | 2,448 | 5% | |||
Public Administration | | | 2,453 | 5% | |||
| | Environmental Quality Programs | |889|| | 2% | 36% | 2.9 | |
The city is frequently mentioned in novels of Ernest Hemingway, Stephen Frey, Chuck Palahniuk, James Lee Burke, James Crumley, and former resident Norman Maclean. In his novel, A River Runs Through It, Maclean wrote that "The world is full of bastards, the number increasing rapidly the further one gets from Missoula, Montana."
Missoula is home to a diverse and influential music scene. Members of bands such as Deranged Diction (Jeff Ament), which formed in Missoula, later moved to Seattle and became key members of groups such as Green River, Mother Love Bone, Pearl Jam, Silkworm, and Love Battery, playing an important role in the birth of the grunge movement. The city is prominently featured in "Apology Song" by Oregon indie-band The Decemberists. Prior to moving to Portland, Decemberist frontman Colin Meloy studied at the University of Montana. In Missoula, Meloy formed the pop band Tarkio. Wantage Record hosts Totalfest, a yearly diy music festival featuring local and touring acts, in Missoula.
In April, 2011, the National Park Service officially recognized the Westside Railroad District, adding it to the National Register of Historic Places. This addition once again expands Missoula's Downtown Historic District, after the February, 2011 addition of Free Speech Corner at Higgens Avenue and West Front Street. Free Speech Corner commemorates the free speech fights of the Industrial Workers of the World, a union formed in 1905 which sought to organize timber, lumber and mining workers into one worldwide union.
Professional sports teams in Missoula include
Team !! Sport !! League !! Established !! Venue !! Championships | |||||
Montana Grizzlies football | American-Football | Division I Football Championship Subdivision| | 1897 | Washington Grizzly Stadium | 3 |
Missoula Osprey | Baseball| | Pioneer League | 1999 | Ogren Park at Allegiance Field | 2 |
Missoula Phoenix | American-Football| | Rocky Mountain Football League | 2006 | Washington Grizzly Stadium | 1 |
Missoula Maulers | Hockey| | American West Hockey League | 2007 | Glacier Ice Rink | 0 |
Hellgate Rollergirls | Roller Derby| | Regional Competitions | 2009 | The Adams Center(Missoula, Montana) | 0 |
Adjacent to Caras Park is A Carousel for Missoula, a wooden, hand-carved and volunteer-built carousel.
In 2010, the City Council proposed and approved a non-discrimination ordinance, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression in employment, housing, and public accommodations. Although the ordinance, proposed by councilmembers Stacy Rye and Dave Strohmaier, received some opposition from members of the Missoula community and surrounding areas, it passed by a 10-2 margin, making Missoula the first city in the state with such non-discrimination protection.
Currently the City of Missoula is undergoing a rewrite of the zoning and subdivision regulations, is undertaking a study of the Urban Fringe Development Area (UFDA), is working in partnership on the Downtown Master Plan, and is finalizing a long-range transportation plan.
Mayor !! John Engen | |
Ward 1 | Dave Strohmaier/Jason Wiener |
Ward 2 | Pam Walzer/Roy Houseman |
Ward 3 | Stacy Rye/Bob Jaffe |
Ward 4 | Jon Wilkins/Lyn Hellegaard |
Ward 5 | Dick Haines/Renee Mitchell |
Ward 6 | Ed Childers/Marilyn Marler |
City police chief Mark Muir defended criticism of the rising number of arrests, saying the rise could be attributed to "some people [being] more flagrant in their pot smoking because they wrongly believe the initiative protects them within the city."
Most of the legislative districts that approved of medical marijuana overwhelmingly include the city of Missoula within their boundaries.
A statewide chapter of NORML was founded in 1998 and is based out of Missoula.
Beyond the state level, Missoula is also home of the International Wildlife Film Festival, the Adventure Cycling Association, the Jeannette Rankin Peace Center, American Indian Business Leaders, Boone and Crockett Club, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, and the Outdoor Writers Association of America.
Also located in Missoula are the Poverello Center, the largest emergency homeless shelter and soup kitchen in Montana, and Missoula Correctional Services, a non-profit company that runs a Pre-Release Center for the Montana Department of Corrections and coordinates various city and county programs such as Community Service, Misdemeanor Probation, Pretrial Supervision and the Alternative Jail Program.
The first public high school was opened in 1904, but was quickly overran with students and was converted back to a grade school when the Missoula County High School, designed by A.J. Gibson, was opened in 1908. Expansions were made, but in 1951 it was decided that another campus was needed, and a new school was opened in 1957. Initially the two campuses separated between upper and lower classmen, but in 1965 they became two separate schools. By student vote, the original Missoula County High School became Hellgate High School and the new campus became Sentinel High School. In 1980, Missoula became the first city in Montana to have four secondary schools when it Big Sky High School was established. Missoula's forth secondary school is Loyola Sacred Heart High School, a private Catholic school created from a merger in 1974 of the all-girls Sacred Heart Academy (est. 1873) and the all-boys Loyola High School (est. 1911).
Missoula is also home to several vocational schools not affiliated with a university education. These include The Rocky Mountain School of Photography, Connole-Morton Insurance School, The Dickinson Lifelong Learning Center, The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UM (MOLLI) (non-credit), Modern Beauty School, Montana Academy of Skin Care, Montana School of Massage, and Sage Truck Driving School.
scope="col" | Highest Educational Attainment (2009) | Missoula | Montana | U.S. | ! scope="col" | ! scope="col" | ! scope="col" | ! scope="col" | ! scope="col" | ||
Less than High School Diploma | 8.6% | 9.6%| | 15.5% | |8.8%%|| | 9.3% | 3.4% | 9.6% | 5.3% | |||
scop="row" | High School Diploma or equivalent | 22.9% | 31.9%| | 29.3% | |29.7%|| | 30.9% | 15.9% | 38.8% | 21.8% | ||
scop="row" | Some College | 22.0% | 23.8%| | 20.3% | |24.5%|| | 27.5% | 23.4% | 21.6% | 22.5% | ||
scop="row" | Associates Degree | 6.2% | 7.6%| | 7.4% | |7.3%|| | 8.6% | 6.0% | 7.5% | 7.6% | ||
scop="row" | Bachelor's Degree | 25.3 | 18.7%| | 17.4% | |21.2%|| | 16.2% | 32.6% | 15.4% | 25.8% | ||
scop="row" | Graduate or Professional Degree | 14.9% | 8.3%| | 10.1% | |8.6%|| | 7.5% | 18.7% | 7.1% | 17.0% | ||
scop="row" | High School or higher | 91.3% | 90.4%| | 84.6%% | |91.2%|| | 90.7% | 96.6% | 90.4% | 94.7% | ||
scop="row" | Bachelor's Degree or higher | 40.3% | 27%| | 27.5%% | |29.7%|| | 23.7% | 51.3% | 22.5% | 42.8% |
Print: Missoula has four main sources of print media: the Missoulian (primary daily), Missoula Independent (alternative weekly), Montana Kaimin (college), and New West (digital, progressive). The Missoulian was founded as a weekly publication in 1870 as the Missoula & Cedar Creek Pioneer. It was converted to a weekly and changed to the current Missoulian in 1891 by the founder of the Missoula Mercantile Co., A. B. Hammond. Today, the Missoulian remains Missoula's most popular newspaper with a circulation of over 26,000. It is also the third most read newspaper in Montana behind the Billings Gazette and the Great Falls Tribune. The Missoula Independent (founded 1991) is the largest weekly newspaper in Montana and the states only member of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. With over 21,000 readers it has twice the circulation of second place Billings Outpost. The newspaper is distributed free to more than 600 locations across Western Montana from Hamilton in the south to Whitefish in the north. The Montana Kaimin (founded 1891) is likewise distribute free throughout parts of Missoula with heavy student traffic from the University of Montana where the newspaper is printed M-F during the school year. New West was founded in 2005 as a left-leaning "next-generation media company" that focused on culture, environment, economy, and politics in the Rocky Mountain West.
30px|link=U.S. Route 12 -- U.S. Route 12 -- US 12 enters Montana at Lolo Pass, southwest of Lolo Hot Springs in the Lolo National Forest before meeting with US 93 at Lolo and continuing as a concurrency northeast for to Missoula. Here U.S. 12 breaks off U.S. 93 and continues Northeast to Downtown Missoula along Brooks Street before cutting through the University District and across the Madison Street Bridge. U.S. 12 joins Interstate 90 East at Exit 105 (Van Buren Street) and overlaps I-90 for , until reaching Garrison.
The original U.S. 12 was approved by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHO) in 1939 to extend into Wyoming and Montana. The route, would not include Missoula, however, until U.S. 12 was rerouted along State Route 6 in October 1959. In 1962, the route was extended from Missoula southeast toward Idaho along U.S. 93.
30px|link=U.S. Route 93 -- U.S. Route 93 -- U.S. 93 U.S. 93 enters Montana from Idaho at Lost Trail Pass and travels north descending through the Bitterroot National Forest. The highway continues along the Lewis and Clark trail into the Bitterroot Valley until it joins U.S. 12 at Lolo as a concurrency northeast for to Missoula. The highway runs along Reserve Street on the western edge of Missoula before meeting Interstate 90 at Exit 101 and following it before breaking off north at Exit 96.
U.S. 93 was approved by AASHO in 1927 beginning at the Canadian International Boundary through Missoula and exiting Montana near Gibbonsville.
30px|link=Montana Highway 200 -- Montana Highway 200 -- MT Highway 200 enters Missoula along Broadway Street in northern Missoula just south of Interstate 90. MT 200 joins I-90 at Exit 105 (Van Buren Street) and continues together west before breaking off at Exit 96 and heading north along U.S. 93 toward Flathead Lake.
The airport is also home to Homestead Helicopters and Fixed-Base Operators Minuteman Jet Center (an Exxon Mobil Avitat fuel provider), and Northstar Jet (a Phillips 66 fuel provider).
History: Missoula's first landing strip was laid out in 1923 south of the university. An additional strip near the Western Montana Fair Grounds on what is now Sentinel High School was sold to the county in 1927 at the request of the Missoula chapter of the National Aeronautic Association and would become Missoula's first true airport. The current airfield is named after that chapter's first president, Harry O. Bell along with mountain flying pioneer Bob Johnson of Johnson Flying Service (now Minuteman Aviation). The original Garden City Airport was renamed Hale Field in 1935 and would operate as such until closing forever in 1954. The airport was gradually replaced by the Missoula County Airport opened in 1941 with WPA funds and the cooperation of the US Forest Service who needed access to an airport. The new airport was renamed Johnson-Bell Field in 1968 and today serves nearly 600,000 passengers a year.
Special bus service is offered to the University of Montana through three of city's park-n-ride lots in addition to late-night UDASH shuttle that offers service to Downtown. Bus fair for university students is prepaid as part of the university's transportation fee. Missoula is also served by Greyhound Lines, and Rimrock Trailways that provide intercity bus transportation to and from Missoula.
In November 1999, after imploding the old hospital called the Broadway Building, construction began for a new outpatient services building next to the present hospital building. The Broadway Building opened in March 2002, with two underground floors of parking and six stories of physician offices and outpatient services. Physicians include those from the Western Montana Clinic, the Montana Neuroscience Institute, and the Montana Cancer Center, among others. Outpatient services include physical, occupational, and speech therapy, diabetes services, and cardiac rehabilitation.
Situated on a grassy plain near historic Fort Missoula, Community Hospital is part of a modern complex that includes a nursing home, the Missoula Crippled Children's Center and private offices.
The story of Community Hospital begins with two brothers who were prominent in the early history of Western Montana medicine.
Dr. Charles Thornton (known affectionately as "Dr. Charles") came west in 1905 to begin a practice in Corvallis, Montana. At that time the mortality rate of spotted or "tick" fever was 80 to 90 per cent. Of the first 11 cases Dr. Charles treated, only one patient died. He subsequently became known throughout the Bitterroot Valley for his ability to treat the dreaded Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
An ardent sportsman, Dr. Charles was among the first to introduce Chinese and Hungarian pheasants to Western Montana. He also imported and bred German shorthaired pointers to hunt the wily pheasants. At one time, he had more than 30 German pointers in his kennels. Dr. Charles also imported Belgian horses and brown Swiss dairy cattle.
Dr. Charles' brother, Dr. Will Thornton ("Dr. Will") came west in 1907 and started a practice in Stevensville, Montana. He had been a professor of anatomy and had worked with Dr. J. H. Kellogg, the surgeon who established the Battle Creek sanitarium in Michigan. Dr. Kellogg was the older brother of W. K. Kellogg, who developed the corn flake into a multi-million-dollar industry.
Dr. Will performed more than 15,000 major operations in 36 years of active practice, and he participated in the construction and operation of three private hospitals in Western Montana.
In 1910 he built the first hospital in the Bitterroot Valley and ran it until 1917, when he moved to Missoula. At that time, he built the Thornton Hospital, now the Thornton Apartments at the corner of Third and Orange Streets.
Category:Cities in Montana Category:County seats in Montana Category:Metropolitan areas of Montana Category:Populated places in Missoula County, Montana Category:Industrial Workers of the World Category:Populated places established in 1860 Category:University towns in the United States
ar:ميسولا، مونتانا an:Missoula ast:Missoula zh-min-nan:Missoula bg:Мисула ca:Missoula da:Missoula de:Missoula es:Missoula (Montana) fr:Missoula ia:Missoula it:Missoula he:מיזולה ht:Missoula, Montana lmo:Missoula mrj:Мизула (Монтана) nl:Missoula ja:ミズーラ (モンタナ州) no:Missoula pl:Missoula pt:Missoula sk:Missoula (Montana) sv:Missoula vo:Missoula zh:米蘇拉 (蒙大拿州)This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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If we decide to change our e-mail practices, we will post those changes to this privacy statement, the homepage, and other places we think appropriate so that you are aware of what information we collect, how we use it, and under what circumstances, if any, we disclose it.
If we make material changes to our e-mail practices, we will notify you here, by e-mail, and by means of a notice on our home page.
The advertising banners and other forms of advertising appearing on this Web site are sometimes delivered to you, on our behalf, by a third party. In the course of serving advertisements to this site, the third party may place or recognize a unique cookie on your browser. For more information on cookies, you can visit www.cookiecentral.com.
As we continue to develop our business, we might sell certain aspects of our entities or assets. In such transactions, user information, including personally identifiable information, generally is one of the transferred business assets, and by submitting your personal information on Wn.com you agree that your data may be transferred to such parties in these circumstances.