This is a timeline of pre-statehood Montana history comprising substantial events in the history of the area that would become the State of Montana prior to November 8, 1889. This area existed as Montana Territory from May 28, 1864, until November 8, 1889, when it was admitted to the Union as the State of Montana.
Pre-territorial period
1805âÂÂ1840
- 1805âÂÂ1806 â Lewis and Clark Expedition travels through Montana
- November 21, 1807 â Fur trader Manuel Lisa establishes Fort Raymond at the mouth of the Big Horn River on the Yellowstone River.
- Summer 1808 (1809?) â Fur trapper John Colter escapes a band of Blackfeet Indians near Three Forks, Montana in what is known as "Colter's Run".
- November 9, 1809 â British fur trader and explorer David Thompson establishes Saleesh House at Thompson Falls on the Columbia River.
- February 26, 1810 â British fur trader and explorer David Thompson encounters Bitterroot Salish Indians wintering on the Flathead River below Flathead Lake.
- March 20, 1822 â William H. Ashley forms the Rocky Mountain Fur Company in St. Louis and operates it in Wyoming and Montana for twelve years. Jim Bridger, William Sublette, James Pierson Beckwourth and Jedediah Smith are among its corps of trappers.
- 1828 â The American Fur Company establishes Fort Union on the Missouri River near its confluence with the Yellowstone River.
- AprilâÂÂJuly 1832 â The first steamship into Montana, the "Yellowstone", makes its inaugural round-trip voyage from St. Louis to Fort Union.
- June 24, 1833 â Prince Maximilian of Wied-Neuwied arrives at Fort Union on the steamship "Assiniboin" spending five weeks traveling among the Native Americans and hunting in the Marias River country.
- 1836âÂÂ1845 â Hugh Monroe, a French Canadian fur trader from Quebec was most likely the first white person to visit the region of Glacier National Park.
1841âÂÂ1850
1851âÂÂ1860
1861âÂÂ1864
- July 28, 1862 â A major gold strike at Grasshopper Creek leads to the settlement of Bannack City.
- August 26, 1862 â C. W. Spillman, a horse thief is hanged at Gold Creek, the first recorded hanging in what would later become Montana
- November 1862 â The first permanent settlement in the Gallatin Valley, Gallatin City, is established near present-day Three Forks, Montana by Frank and Thomas Dunbar.
- November 24, 1862 â The first post office in what would later become Montana is established at Hell Gate.
- March 4, 1863 â U.S. Congress creates Idaho Territory from the eastern portion of Washington Territory and the western portion of Dakota Territory, for the first time politically uniting lands of present-day Montana west of the Continental Divide with those east of the Divide.
- May 5, 1863 â Civilian prospectors James Stuart and fifteen men plat Big Horn City at the confluence of the Big Horn and Yellowstone Rivers during the Yellowstone Expedition of 1863.
- May 26, 1863 â Bill Fairweather and Henry Edgar discover the largest placer gold strike in North America at Alder Gulch.
- July 1863 â John Bozeman and John Jacobs blaze the Bozeman Trail from Douglas, Wyoming to Bannack, Montana.
- December 19âÂÂ21, 1863 â George Ives is tried and hanged for the murder of Nicolas Tiebolt in Nevada City, Montana. Wilbur F. Sanders acts as the prosecution.
- December 23, 1863 â The Vigilance Committee of Alder Gulch is established in Virginia City, Montana
- January 1864 â The Vigilance Committee of Virginia City, Montana tries and hangs Cyrus Skinner, Aleck Carter and Johnny Cooper in Hell Gate
- January 10, 1864 â Henry Plummer, the sheriff of Bannack, Montana, is hanged with two other alleged criminals for robbery and murder by Montana Vigilantes.
- 1864 â Jim Bridger guides immigrants and prospectors along the Bridger Trail to Virginia City, Montana
Territorial period
1864
1865
- February 2 â Historical Society of Montana incorporated at Virginia City, Montana.
- February 5 â Governor Edgerton approves the Montana Territorial Seal designed by Francis M. Thompson (effectively the seal used by the state of Montana)
- February 7 â Virginia City, Montana becomes the second capital of Montana Territory
- March 24 â Congress authorizes the Blackfoot Treaty of 1865 (signed in October at Fort Benton, Montana) by which the Blackfoot tribes ceded all lands south of the Missouri and Teton rivers and west of the Milk river to the Rocky Mountains to the U.S. Government.
- Summer â Frank L. Worden and Captain Christopher P. Higgins began construction of lumber and flour mills five miles east of Hell Gate. Known as Missoula Mills, this became the site of Missoula, Montana
- August 26 â The Montana Post, Virginia City, Montana publishes the first serial of Thomas J. Dimsdale's The Vigilantes of Montana
- September 1 â U.S. Army forces engaged about 300 Hunkpapa, Sans Arc, and Miniconjou Lakota Sioux at Alkali Creek, near Broadus, Montana during the Powder River Expedition.
- September â Thomas Francis Meagher appointed territorial governor of Montana
- October 14 â The first regular mails arrived in Helena, Montana via stagecoach from Corinne, Utah.
1866
1867
1868
- July 29 â Fort Smith evacuated, beginning the closure of the Bozeman Trail to white settlers as a result of Red Cloud's War.
- November 6 â Red Cloud signs Treaty of Fort Laramie, which required abandonment of all forts along the Bozeman Trail.
1869
1870
1871
1872
- March 1 â President Ulysses S. Grant signs the bill establishing Yellowstone National Park, portions of which are in Gallatin and Park counties, Montana.
- June 5 â The U.S. Congress establishes the Flathead Indian Reservation for Bitterroot Salish, Pend d'Oreille and Kootenai tribes and opens the Bitterroot Valley to homesteading.
- July 23 â Col. John A Haydon leads a Northern Pacific railway survey party from Fort Ellis, east of present-day Bozeman, Montana. Haydon's supply train consisted of almost seventy wagons with rations for 105 days and a small herd of beef cattle. Haydon's military escort, commanded by Major Eugene Baker, Second Cavalry, consisting of four companies, 187 men, of the Second Cavalry, and four companies, 189 men, of the Seventh Infantry.
- August 14 - The Battle of Pryor's Creek takes place with a war party formed with as many as a thousand warriors of Lakotas, Cheyennes, Arapahos and Kiowas to go upstream on the Powder river. This war party led by Sitting Bull, Red Cloud and Crazy horse attacks Haydon's railroad survey party and its military escort. By mid morning the attack was over and no one in the railroad party was injured.
1873
1874
1875
- July 8 â W.C. Shippen, a Methodist minister in Helena, Montana has the "Hanging Tree", a tall, dead Ponderosa Pine cut down. Ten men had been hanged on the tree which stood at the corner of Broadway and Davis streets; the last being J.L. Compton and Joseph Wilson on April 30, 1870, for robbery and murder.
- December 6 â The Federal Indian Bureau issues a proclamation that any Indians found off their respective reservations as of January 31, 1876 would be considered hostile. This set the stage for the Great Sioux War of 1876.
1876
- March 17 â The Battle of Powder River takes place between forces of the U.S. Army and Northern Cheyenne near present-day Broadus, Montana.
- June 17 â Lakota and Northern Cheyenne tribes under the leadership of Crazy Horse engage U.S. Army forces under the command of Brigadier General George Crook at the Battle of the Rosebud.
- June 25âÂÂ26 â Forces under the command of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer, 7th Cavalry Regiment are defeated at the Battle of the Little Bighorn by a large force of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes during the Great Sioux War of 1876.
- August 28 â General William Tecumseh Sherman ordered Colonel Nelson A. Miles to establish a U.S. Army cantonment at the mouth of the Tongue River, a strategic point along the Yellowstone River, near present-day Miles City, Montana. Work soon began on the army post, which would officially be named Fort Keogh on November 8, 1878. From headquarters here, General Miles effectively operated against the Sioux forces led by Sitting Bull and others.
- October 21 â Colonel Nelson Miles and the 5th Infantry Regiment encounter Sioux chief Sitting Bull at the Battle of Cedar Creek.
1877
1878
1879
1880
- March 9 â Narrow gauge tracks of the Utah and Northern Railway reach Monida Pass from Ogden, Utah to become the first railroad in Montana Territory.
- June 11 â Jeannette Rankin is born, near Missoula.
- Summer â Twenty-seven-year-old photographer Frank Jay Haynes makes first visit to Montana traveling on the steamboat "Far West" from Bismarck, North Dakota to Fort Benton, Montana.
- Summer â Lumberman and rancher Augustus Barrows establishes the stage stop of Ubet, Montana in the Judith Basin.
- September 6 â Actor Joe Rickson, who appeared in 90 silent films, is born in Clearcreek in the Bear Paw Mountains.
- November 18 â Marcus Daly turns on Montana's first electric light in the Alice Mine near Butte, Montana.
- December 4 â Dillon, Montana is established as a railroad camp on the Utah and Northern Railway and is named after the company president, Sidney Dillon.
- DHS Ranch in Fergus County established by A.J. Davis, Samuel Hauser, and Granville Stuart.
- Sixteen-year-old cowboy artist Charles M. Russell arrives in Montana from St. Louis.
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889
See also
Notes