Butte, Montana

Coordinates: 45°59′56″N 112°31′27″W / 45.99889°N 112.52417°W / 45.99889; -112.52417
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Butte
Butte-Silver Bow
Clockwise, left to right: View of uptown Butte from west; Our Lady of the Rockies; Curtis Music Hall; aerial view of the Berkeley Pit; mine headframe; and the Finlen Hotel.
Clockwise, left to right: View of uptown Butte from west; Our Lady of the Rockies; Curtis Music Hall; aerial view of the Berkeley Pit; mine headframe; and the Finlen Hotel.
Flag of Butte
Official seal of Butte
Nickname: 
Butte America
Motto: 
The Richest Hill on Earth
Map of Silver Bow County showing the city of Butte in red and Walkerville in grey
Map of Silver Bow County showing the city of Butte in red and Walkerville in grey
Coordinates: 45°59′56″N 112°31′27″W / 45.99889°N 112.52417°W / 45.99889; -112.52417
CountryUnited States
StateMontana
CountySilver Bow
Settled1864
Area
 • Total716.34 sq mi (1,855.32 km2)
 • Land715.76 sq mi (1,853.80 km2)
 • Water0.59 sq mi (1.52 km2)
Elevation5,538 ft (1,688 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total34,494
 • Density48.19/sq mi (18.61/km2)
Time zoneUTC−7 (MST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−6 (MDT)
ZIP code
59701, 59702, 59703, 59707, 59750
Area code406
FIPS code30-11397
GNIS feature ID2409651[2]
Websitewww.co.silverbow.mt.us

Butte (/bjuːt/ BEWT) is a consolidated city-county and the county seat of Silver Bow County, Montana, United States. In 1977, the city and county governments consolidated to form the sole entity of Butte-Silver Bow. The city covers 718 square miles (1,860 km2), and, according to the 2020 census, has a population of 34,494, making it Montana's fifth-largest city. It is served by Bert Mooney Airport with airport code BTM.

Established in 1864 as a mining camp in the northern Rocky Mountains on the Continental Divide, Butte experienced rapid development in the late 19th century, and was Montana's first major industrial city.[3] In its heyday between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, it was one of the largest copper boom towns in the American West. Employment opportunities in the mines attracted surges of Asian and European immigrants, particularly the Irish;[4] as of 2017, Butte has the largest population of Irish Americans per capita of any U.S. city.

Butte was also the site of various historical events involving its mining industry and active labor unions and socialist politics, the most famous of which was the labor riot of 1914. Despite the dominance of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, Butte was never a company town. Other major events in the city's history include the 1917 Speculator Mine disaster, the largest hard rock mining disaster in world history.

Over the course of its history, Butte's mining and smelting operations generated more than $48 billion worth of ore, but also resulted in numerous environmental implications for the city: The upper Clark Fork River, with headwaters at Butte, is the largest Superfund site in the nation, and the city is also home to the Berkeley Pit. In the late 20th century, the EPA instated cleanup efforts, and the Butte Citizens Technical Environmental Committee was established in 1984. In the 21st century, efforts to interpret and preserve Butte's heritage are addressing both the town's historical significance and the continuing importance of mining to its economy and culture. The city's Uptown Historic District, on the National Register of Historic Places, is one of the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the U.S., containing nearly 6,000 contributing properties. The city is also home to Montana Technological University, a public engineering and technical university.

History

Early history and immigrants

Before Butte's formal establishment in 1864, the area consisted of a mining camp that had developed in the early 1860s.[5] The city is in the Silver Bow Creek Valley (or Summit Valley), a natural bowl sitting high in the Rockies straddling the Continental Divide,[6] positioned on the southwestern side of a large mass of granite known as the Boulder Batholith, which dates to the Cretaceous era.[7] In 1874, William L. Farlin founded the Asteroid Mine (subsequently known as the Travona), which attracted a significant number of prospectors seeking gold and silver.[7] The mines attracted workers from Cornwall (England),[8] Ireland, Wales, Lebanon, Canada, Finland, Austria, Italy, China, Montenegro, Mexico, and more.[9] In the ethnic neighborhoods, young men formed gangs to protect their territory and socialize into adult life, including the Irish of Dublin Gulch, the Eastern Europeans of the McQueen Addition, and the Italians of Meaderville.[10][page needed]

Butte courthouse and additional buildings, 1885

Among the migrants were many Chinese who set up businesses that created a Chinatown in Butte.[4] The Chinese migrations stopped in 1882 with the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act. There was anti-Chinese sentiment in the 1870s and onward due to the white settlers' racism, exacerbated by economic depression, and in 1895, the chamber of commerce and labor unions started a boycott of Chinese-owned businesses. The business owners fought back by suing the unions and won. The history of the Chinese migrants in Butte is documented in the Mai Wah Museum.[11][12]

The influx of miners gave Butte a reputation as a wide-open town where any vice was obtainable. The city's saloon and red-light district, called the "Line" or "The Copper Block", centered on Mercury Street, where the elegant bordellos included the famous Dumas Brothel.[13] Behind the brothel was the equally famous Venus Alley, where women plied their trade in small cubicles called "cribs."[13] The red-light district brought miners and other men from all over the region and remained open until 1982 after the closure of the Dumas Brothel; the city's red-light was one of the last such urban districts in the country.[13] Commercial breweries first opened in Butte in the 1870s, and were a staple of the city's early economy; they were usually run by German immigrants, including Leopold Schmidt, Henry Mueller, and Henry Muntzer. The breweries were always staffed by union workers. Most ethnic groups in Butte, from Germans and Irish to Italians and various Eastern Europeans, including children, enjoyed the locally brewed lagers, bocks, and other types of beer.[14]

Industrial expansion

The Anselmo Mine, one of many in Butte, opened in 1887.

In the late 19th century, copper was in great demand because of new technologies such as electric power that required the use of copper. Industrial magnates fought for control of Butte's mining wealth. These "Copper Kings" were William A. Clark,[15] Marcus Daly, James Andrew Murray and F. Augustus Heinze.[7] The Anaconda Copper Mining Company began in 1881 when Marcus Daly bought a small mine named the Anaconda. He was a part-owner, mine manager and engineer of the Alice, a silver mine in Walkerville, a suburb of Butte. While working in the Alice, he noticed significant quantities of high-grade copper ore. Daly obtained permission to inspect nearby workings. After his employers, the Walker Brothers, refused to buy the Anaconda, Daly sold his interest in the Alice and bought it himself. He asked San Francisco mining magnate George Hearst for additional support. Hearst agreed to buy one-fourth of the new company's stock without visiting the site. While mining the silver left in his mine, huge deposits of copper were soon developed and Daly became a copper magnate. When surrounding silver mines "played out" and closed, Daly quietly bought up the neighboring mines, forming a mining company. He built a smelter at Anaconda, Montana (a company town), and connected it to Butte by railway. Anaconda Company eventually owned all the mines on Butte Hill.[16]

Between 1884 and 1888, W. A. Clark constructed the Copper King Mansion in Butte, which became his second residence from his home in New York City.[17] In 1899, he also purchased the Columbia Gardens, a small park he developed into an amusement park, featuring a pavilion, roller coaster, and a lake for swimming and canoeing. Clark's expansion of the park was intended to "provide a place where children and families could get away from the polluted air of the Butte mining industry."[18] The city's rapid expansion was noted in an 1889 frontier survey: "Butte, Montana, fifteen years ago a small placer-mining village clinging to the mountain side, has now risen to the rank of the first mining camp of the world... [It] is now the most populous city of Montana, numbering twenty-five thousand active, enterprising, prosperous inhabitants."[19] In 1888 alone, mining operations in Butte generated an "almost inconceivable" output of $23 million (equivalent to $749,118,519 in 2022) worth of ore.[19]

Columbia Gardens, an amusement park in Butte, c. 1905

Copper ore mined from the Butte mining district in 1910 alone totaled 284,000,000 pounds (129,000,000 kg); at the time, Butte was the largest producer of copper in North America and rivaled in worldwide metal production only by South Africa.[7] The same year, in excess of 10,000,000 troy ounces (310,000 kg) of silver and 37,000 troy ounces (1,200 kg) of gold were also discovered.[7] The amount of ore produced in the city earned it the nickname "The Richest Hill on Earth."[7] With its large workforce of miners performing in physically dangerous conditions, Butte was the site of active labor union movements, and came to be known as "the Gibraltar of Unionism."[20][21]

By 1885, there were about 1,800 dues-paying members of a general union in Butte. That year the union reorganized as the Butte Miners' Union (BMU), spinning off all non-miners to separate craft unions. Some of these joined the Knights of Labor, and by 1886 the separate organizations came together to form the Silver Bow Trades and Labor Assembly, with 34 separate unions representing nearly all of the 6,000 workers around Butte.[22] The BMU established branch unions in mining towns like Barker, Castle, Champion, Granite, and Neihart, and extended support to other mining camps hundreds of miles away. In 1892 there was a violent strike in Coeur d'Alene.[23] Although the BMU was experiencing relatively friendly relations with local management, the events in Idaho were disturbing. The BMU not only sent thousands of dollars to support the Idaho miners, they mortgaged their buildings to send more.[24]

There was a growing concern that local unions were vulnerable to the power of Mine Owners' Associations like the one in Coeur d'Alene.[25] In May 1893, about 40 delegates from northern hard-rock mining camps met in Butte and established the Western Federation of Miners (WFM), which sought to organize miners throughout the West.[26] The Butte Miners' Union became Local Number One of the new WFM.[27] The WFM won a strike in Cripple Creek, Colorado, the following year, but in 1896–97 lost another violent strike in Leadville, Colorado, prompting the Montana State Trades and Labor Council to issue a proclamation to organize a new Western labor federation[28] along industrial lines.[29]

Anaconda Copper and civil unrest

Frank Little, an IWW organizer who was lynched in Butte in 1917

In 1899, Daly, William Rockefeller, Henry H. Rogers, and Thomas W. Lawson organized the Amalgamated Copper Mining Company.[30] Not long after, the company changed its name to Anaconda Copper Mining Company (ACM). Over the years, Anaconda was owned by assorted larger corporations. In the 1920s, it had a virtual monopoly over the mines in and around Butte.[31] Between approximately 1900 and 1917, Butte also had a strong streak of Socialist politics, even electing Mayor Lewis Duncan on the Socialist ticket in 1911, and again in 1913; Duncan was impeached in 1914 for neglecting duties after a bombing in the city's miners' hall in 1914.[32][33]

Butte also established itself as "one of the most solid union cities in America."[34] After 1905, it became a hotbed of Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, or the "Wobblies") organizing.[35] Rivalry between IWW supporters and the WFM locals culminated in the Butte, Montana labor riots of 1914, and resulted in the loss of union recognition by the mine owners.[36] After the dissolution of the Miners' Union, the Anaconda Company attempted to inaugurate programs aimed at enticing employees.[36] A number of clashes between laborers, labor organizers, and the Anaconda Company ensued, including the 1917 lynching of IWW executive board officer Frank Little.[37] In 1920, company mine guards gunned down strikers in the Anaconda Road Massacre.[38] Seventeen were shot in the back as they tried to flee, and one man died.[39]

Sparked by a tragic accident more than 2,000 feet (600 m) below the ground on June 8, 1917, a fire in the Granite Mountain mine shaft spewed flames, smoke, and poisonous gas through the labyrinth of tunnels including the connected Speculator Mine.[40] A rescue effort commenced, but carbon monoxide was contaminating the air supply.[41][42] Several men barricaded themselves against bulkheads to save their lives, but many others died in a panic to try to escape.[42] Rescue workers set up a fan to prevent the fire from spreading. This worked for a short time, but when the rescuers tried to use water, it evaporated, creating steam that burned those trying to escape.[43] Once the fire had been extinguished, recovery of the deceased began; many of the bodies were mutilated beyond recognition, leaving many unidentified.[44] The disaster claimed a total of 168 lives.[45] As of 2017, the event remained the largest hard rock mining accident in history.[46] The Granite Mountain Memorial in Butte commemorates those who died in the accident.[47]

Protests and strikes began after the Speculator Mine disaster, as well as the establishment of the Metal Mine Workers Union; about 15,000 workers abandoned their jobs in the disaster's wake.[48] Between 1914 and 1920, the U.S. National Guard occupied Butte six times to restore civility.[48] In 1917, copper production from the Butte mines peaked and steadily declined thereafter. By WWII, copper production from the ACM's holdings in Chuquicamata, Chile, far exceeded Butte's production.[49][50]

In 1919, women's rights activist Margaret Jane Steele Rozsa became a food inspector for Butte, and immediately began pressing for change to questionable practices by several county commissioners who had been keeping the community's cost of living artificially high by, among other things, allowing carloads of perishable foods to rot on unloaded trains at the railroad station.[51][52] She also "was instrumental in getting senate bill No. 19 through the legislature" that year to ensure that 199 tubercular soldiers who had served in World War I would be given "preference of entry to the Galen hospital", and that the legislature would authorize $20,000 to build additional dormitories at the hospital to make that care possible since hospital admissions were already at capacity.[53] In 1921, she became the first female prohibition inspector in the city.[54]

Open-pit mining era

Patrons at a matinee of The Phantom Foe at the American Theater, December 25, 1920
1942 view of the city

Disputes between miners' unions and companies continued through the 1920s and 1930s,[55] with several strikes and protests, one of which lasted for ten months in 1921.[56] On New Year's Eve 1922, protestors attempted to detonate the Hibernian Hall on Main Street with dynamite.[56][57]

Further industrial expansions included the arrival of the first mail plane in 1928, and in 1937, the city's streetcar system was dismantled and replaced by bus lines.[56] After the 1920s, the ACM began to reduce its activities in Butte due to the labor-intensivity of underground mining, as well as competition from other mine holdings in South America.[48] This led the Anaconda Company to switch its focus in Butte from underground mining to open pit mining.[48]

Since the 1950s, five major developments in the city have occurred: the Anaconda's decision to begin open-pit mining in the mid-1950s,[48] a series of fires in Butte's business district in the 1970s,[58] a debate over whether to relocate the city's historic business district, a new civic leadership, and the end of copper mining in 1983. In response, Butte looked for ways to diversify the economy and provide employment. The legacy of over a century of environmental degradation has, for example, produced some jobs. Environmental cleanup in Butte, designated a Superfund site, has employed hundreds of people.[59]

Thousands of homes were destroyed in the Meaderville suburb and surrounding areas, McQueen and East Butte, to excavate the Berkeley Pit, which Anaconda Copper opened in 1954.[56][48] When it opened, the Berkeley Pit was the largest truck-operated open pit copper mine in the nation.[60] It grew until it began encroaching on the Columbia Gardens.[61] After the Gardens caught fire and burned to the ground in November 1973, the Continental Pit was excavated on the former park site.[62] In 1977, the ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) purchased Anaconda, and three years later started shutting down mines due to lower metal prices.[63] In 1983,[64] all mining in the Berkeley Pit was suspended. The same year, an organization of low-income and unemployed Butte residents formed to fight for jobs and environmental justice; the Butte Community Union produced a detailed plan for community revitalization and won substantial benefits, including a Montana Supreme Court victory striking down as unconstitutional state elimination of welfare benefits.[65] After mining ceased at the Berkeley Pit, water pumps in nearby mines were also shut down, which resulted in highly acidic water laced with toxic heavy metals filling up the pit.[66]

The Berkeley Pit in 1984

Anaconda ceased mining at the Continental Pit in 1983. Montana Resources LLP bought the property and reopened the Continental Pit in 1986.[67] The company ceased mining in 2000, but resumed in 2003.[68]

From 1880 through 2005, the mines of the Butte district produced more than 9.6 million metric tons of copper, 2.1 million metric tons of zinc, 1.6 million metric tons of manganese, 381,000 metric tons of lead, 87,000 metric tons of molybdenum, 715 million troy ounces (22,200 t) of silver, and 2.9 million troy ounces (90 t) of gold.[69]

21st century

Fourteen headframes still remain over mine shafts in Butte,[70] and the city still contains thousands of historic commercial and residential buildings from the boom times,[71] which, especially in Uptown, give it an old-fashioned appearance, with many commercial buildings not fully occupied; according to a 2016 estimate, there were "hundreds" of unoccupied buildings in Butte, resulting in an ordinance to keep record of owners.[72] Preservation efforts of the city's historic buildings began in the late 1990s.[73] As with many industrial cities, tourism and services, especially health care[74] (Butte's St. James Hospital has Southwest Montana's only major trauma center), are rising as primary employers, as well as industrial-sector private companies.[74] Many areas of the city, especially those near the old mines, show signs of urban blight, but a recent influx of investors and an aggressive campaign to remedy blight has led to a renewed interest in restoring property in Uptown Butte's historic district,[75] which expanded in 2006 to include parts of Anaconda and is one of the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the U.S., with 5,991 contributing properties.[76][77]

A century after the era of intensive mining and smelting, environmental issues remain in areas around the city. Arsenic and heavy metals such as lead are found in high concentrations in some spots affected by old mining, and for a period of time in the 1990s the tap water was unsafe to drink due to poor filtration and decades-old wooden supply pipes. Efforts to improve the water supply have taken place in the early 2000s, with millions of dollars invested to upgrade water lines and repair infrastructure. Environmental research and cleanup efforts have contributed to the diversification of the local economy and signs of vitality, including the introduction of a multimillion-dollar polysilicon manufacturing plant nearby in the 1990s.[78] In the late 1990s, Butte was recognized as an All-America City and as one of the National Trust for Historic Preservation's Dozen Distinctive Destinations in 2002.[79]

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, Butte-Silver Bow has an area of 716.82 sq mi (1,856.55 km2), of which 716.25 sq mi (1,855.07 km2) is land and 0.57 sq mi (1.48 km2) (0.08%) is water.[80] The city is on the U.S. Continental Divide.[6] Every highway exiting Butte (except westbound I-90) crosses the Divide (eastbound I-90 via Homestake Pass; eastbound MT 2 via Pipestone Pass; northbound I-15 via Elk Park Pass and southbound I-15 via Deer Lodge Pass).[a]

The city was named for a nearby landform, Big Butte, by the early miners.[82][83] Butte's urban landscape is notable for including mining operations set within residential areas, visible in the form of various headframes throughout the city.[84]

Cityscapes

View of Butte from Big Butte, 1908
View from west side, as seen from the Montana Tech campus, 2012
View from uptown Butte facing south on Idaho Street, 2017

Neighborhoods

Uptown Butte, 2006

The concentration of wealth in Butte due to its mining history resulted in unique and ornate architectural features[85] among its homes and buildings, particularly in the uptown section.[86] Uptown, named for its steep streets,[87] is on a hillside on the northwestern edge of the town and characterized by its abundance of lavish Victorian homes and Queen Anne style cottages built in the late 19th century.[86] Several of Butte's "painted ladies" homes were featured in Elizabeth Pomada's 1987 book Daughters of Painted Ladies.[86][88] Butte-Silver Bow County has an established Urban Revitalization Agency that works to improve building façades to "enhance and promote the architectural resources of historic uptown Butte."[86] In 2017, a television pilot titled Butteification aired on HGTV, which focused on a couple restoring a Victorian home in Butte.[89]

Butte's South district, at a lower elevation than the hillside that comprises northern Butte, has historically been home to working-class neighborhoods.[90] Gold mines originally populated south Butte before it was platted for the Union Pacific Railroad in 1881.[90]

The expansion of the Anaconda Company in the 1960s and 1970s eradicated some of Butte's historic neighborhoods, including the East Side, Dublin Gulch, Meaderville, and Chinatown.[91] The St. Mary's section, which borders uptown to the east, comprised the Dublin Gulch (an enclave for Irish immigrants) and Corktown neighborhoods.[92] It takes its name from the eponymous Roman Catholic parish within it,[93] historically known as the "miner's church", scheduling masses around miners' shifting schedules.[92] Historically, the St. Mary's section of Butte had a prominent population of Slavic and Finnish immigrants in addition to Irish before the mid-20th century.[92]

Climate

Butte has a cold semi-arid climate (BSk) under the Köppen Climate Classification. Winters are long and cold, January averaging 20.0 °F (−6.7 °C), with 30.9 nights falling below 0 °F (−18 °C) and 53.8 days failing to top freezing.[94] Summers are short, with very warm days and chilly nights: July averages 63.6 °F (17.6 °C). Like most areas in this part of North America, annual precipitation is low and largely concentrated in the spring: the wettest month since precipitation records began in 1894 was June 1913, with 8.86 inches (225 mm), while no precipitation fell in September 1904.[95] The wettest calendar year was 1909, with 20.55 inches (522 mm) and the driest was 2021, with 6.49 inches (165 mm). Snowfall is somewhat limited by dryness: the most in one month being 41.5 inches (1,050 mm) in May 1927 and the greatest depth on the ground 27 inches (690 mm) on December 28 and 29, 1996.[96]

The coldest month was January 1937, with a daily mean temperature of −5.5 °F (−20.8 °C), while the coldest complete winter was 1948–49, with a three-month mean of 6.69 °F (−14.06 °C), and the mildest 1925–26, which averaged 29.21 °F (−1.55 °C). July 2007 was easily the hottest month, with a mean maximum of 88.8 °F (31.6 °C), although the hottest day, reaching 100 °F (38 °C), was July 22, 1931. The coldest temperature recorded was −52 °F (−47 °C) on February 9, 1933, and December 23, 1983.[96]

Climate data for Butte, Montana (Bert Mooney Airport), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1894–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 58
(14)
61
(16)
69
(21)
83
(28)
90
(32)
97
(36)
100
(38)
99
(37)
96
(36)
85
(29)
70
(21)
66
(19)
100
(38)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 48.0
(8.9)
50.1
(10.1)
60.1
(15.6)
70.2
(21.2)
78.9
(26.1)
86.9
(30.5)
92.2
(33.4)
91.3
(32.9)
86.1
(30.1)
74.8
(23.8)
59.2
(15.1)
47.5
(8.6)
93.1
(33.9)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 32.1
(0.1)
34.6
(1.4)
43.7
(6.5)
51.1
(10.6)
61.0
(16.1)
70.0
(21.1)
81.3
(27.4)
79.8
(26.6)
69.1
(20.6)
54.3
(12.4)
40.2
(4.6)
30.7
(−0.7)
54.0
(12.2)
Daily mean °F (°C) 20.0
(−6.7)
22.2
(−5.4)
31.6
(−0.2)
38.7
(3.7)
47.6
(8.7)
55.5
(13.1)
63.6
(17.6)
61.8
(16.6)
52.8
(11.6)
40.6
(4.8)
27.8
(−2.3)
19.0
(−7.2)
40.1
(4.5)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 7.9
(−13.4)
9.8
(−12.3)
19.4
(−7.0)
26.4
(−3.1)
34.3
(1.3)
41.1
(5.1)
45.9
(7.7)
43.9
(6.6)
36.5
(2.5)
26.8
(−2.9)
15.5
(−9.2)
7.2
(−13.8)
26.2
(−3.2)
Mean minimum °F (°C) −19.6
(−28.7)
−15.7
(−26.5)
−1.3
(−18.5)
12.4
(−10.9)
21.5
(−5.8)
29.7
(−1.3)
36.3
(2.4)
33.8
(1.0)
24.1
(−4.4)
8.0
(−13.3)
−8.9
(−22.7)
−18.2
(−27.9)
−27.7
(−33.2)
Record low °F (°C) −48
(−44)
−52
(−47)
−36
(−38)
−16
(−27)
9
(−13)
22
(−6)
28
(−2)
23
(−5)
3
(−16)
−23
(−31)
−42
(−41)
−52
(−47)
−52
(−47)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 0.42
(11)
0.43
(11)
0.64
(16)
1.33
(34)
2.02
(51)
2.45
(62)
1.20
(30)
1.28
(33)
1.07
(27)
0.84
(21)
0.60
(15)
0.48
(12)
12.76
(323)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 8.5
(22)
7.4
(19)
10.1
(26)
6.9
(18)
3.7
(9.4)
0.5
(1.3)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
1.1
(2.8)
3.7
(9.4)
6.6
(17)
8.3
(21)
56.9
(146.15)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.8 7.4 8.8 11.2 13.0 13.7 8.7 7.7 6.9 8.2 7.8 7.2 107.4
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 8.0 7.5 9.1 6.0 2.7 0.4 0.0 0.1 0.8 2.8 6.7 7.8 51.9
Source 1: NOAA[94]
Source 2: National Weather Service (average snowfall/snow days 1894–2001)[96]

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1870241
18803,3631,295.4%
189010,723218.9%
190030,470184.2%
191039,16528.5%
192041,6116.2%
193039,532−5.0%
194037,081−6.2%
195033,251−10.3%
196027,877−16.2%
197023,368−16.2%
198037,20559.2%
199033,336−10.4%
200033,8921.7%
201033,525−1.1%
202034,4942.9%
source:[97]

U.S. Decennial Census[98][80]

As of the 2020 census, there were 34,494 people and 14,605 households residing in Butte-Silver Bow,[80] giving a population density of 48.2 people per square mile (18.6 people/km2). Per the US Census' 2019 American Community Survey, the racial makeup of the city was 94.3% White, 0.6% African American, 2.3% Native American, 0.8% Asian, 0.0% Pacific Islander, and 1.9% from two or more races.[80] Hispanic or Latino of any race accounted for 4.6% of the population.[80] Of ethnic groups in Butte, the Irish make up a significant portion, with over one-quarter of the city's population claiming Irish descent, exceeding the percentage of Irish Americans in Boston.[99] Per capita, Butte has the highest percentage of Irish Americans of any city in the United States.[99]

Per the 2019 American Community Survey, the average household size was 2.24 persons, 6.0% of the population is under the age of 5, 20.1% under the age of 18, and 18.7% are 65 years of age or older. 49.3% of residents were female.[80] From 2015 to 2019, the median income for a household in the city was $45,797, and 17.3% of families were below the poverty line.[80]

Some sources say that Butte had a peak population of nearly 100,000 around 1920, but no documentation corroborates this,[21] though it has been reasoned by local journalists based on city directory data.[b] The city's population sank to a minimum around 1990 and has stabilized since then; the apparent jump in the 1980 census was due to the city's consolidation with all of Silver Bow County except Walkerville.

Economy

As a mining boom town, Butte's economy was historically powered by its copious mining operations. Silver and gold were initially the primary metals mined in Butte, but the abundance of copper in the area further invigorated the local economy with the advent of electricity, which created a soaring demand for the metal.[7] After World War I, Butte's mining economy experienced a downward trend that continued throughout the 20th century, until mining operations ceased in 1985 with the closure of the Berkeley Pit.[7] Over the course of its history, the city's mining operations generated over $48 billion worth of ore, making it for a time the richest city in the world.[102]

Much of the city's economy since 2000 has been focused in energy companies (such as the Renewable Energy Corporation and NorthWestern Energy) and healthcare.[74] In 2014, NorthWestern Energy constructed a $25-million facility in uptown.[103]

Government

Mike Mansfield Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in Butte

Local government

In 1977, Butte consolidated with Silver Bow County, becoming a consolidated city-county. It operates under a city-county government. The office of the mayor was eliminated. Mario Micone was the last mayor of Butte. In 1977, he became the first Chief Executive of Butte-Silver Bow County.[104][105]

Politics

Politically, Butte has historically been a Democratic stronghold, owing to its union legacy. Likewise, Silver Bow County has historically been one of Montana's strongest Democratic bastions.[106][107] In 1996, Haley Beaudry became the first Republican to represent Butte in the state legislature since 1950.[106] In 2010, Max Yates was the next Butte Republican elected to the legislature; neither Beaudry nor Yates was reelected.[106] In 2014, Butte became the third city in Montana to pass an anti-discrimination ordinance protecting LGBT residents and visitors from discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations.[108]

Presidential elections results, 1980–[c]
Presidential elections results[109]
Year Republican Democratic Third parties
2020 41.5% 7,745 55.7% 10,392 2.8% 521
2016 38.8% 6,376 52.4% 8,619 8.9% 1,457
2012 32.4% 5,430 64.8% 10,857 2.8% 469
2008 28.3% 4,818 68.5% 11,676 3.2% 548
2004 39.7% 6,381 57.9% 9,307 2.5% 396
2000 37.7% 6,299 53.7% 8,967 8.6% 1,437
1996 22.1% 3,909 63.4% 11,199 14.5% 2,569
1992 19.2% 3,491 54.9% 9,960 25.9% 4,695
1988 30.2% 5,043 68.5% 11,422 1.3% 222
1984 36.9% 6,637 61.6% 11,095 1.5% 278
1980 37.7% 7,301 50.2% 9,721 12.2% 2,355

Culture

Historical sites and museums

Copper King Mansion, built between 1884 and 1888 for magnate William A. Clark
A crowd gathers for the Montana Folk Festival in 2015. "The Original" headframe is converted into a stage during the annual festival.

Butte is home to numerous museums and other educational institutions chronicling its history. In 2002, Butte was one of only 12 U.S. towns to be named a Distinctive Destination by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.[79][110] The Butte Silver Bow Public Library, at 226 W. Broadway, is dedicated to preserving the town's history.[111] The library was created in 1894 as "an antidote to the miners' proclivity for drinking, whoring, and gambling," designed to promote middle-class values and to promote an image of Butte as a cultivated city.[112][113] Additionally, the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives stores and provides public access to documents and artifacts from Butte's past.[114]

Digenite-pyrite specimen from the old Leonard Mine, display at MBMG Mineral Museum

Several museums and attractions are dedicated to the city's mining history, including the MBMG Mineral Museum (on the Montana Tech campus), and the World Museum of Mining, at the Orphan Girl mine in uptown Butte, which features "Hell Roarin' Gulch", a mockup of a frontier mining town.[115] The Berkeley Pit, a gigantic former open pit copper mine, is also open to the public for viewing.[66] Other museums are dedicated to preserving cultural elements of Butte: The Dumas Brothel museum, a former brothel, is in Venus Alley, Butte's former historical red-light district.[116] Another notable site is the Rookwood Speakeasy, a prohibition-era speakeasy that features an underground city,[117] and the Mai Wah Museum, dedicated to preserving Asian heritage in the Rocky Mountains.[118]

The 34-room Copper King Mansion in uptown Butte was constructed in 1884 by William A. Clark, one of the city's three Copper Kings.[87] The mansion functions as a bed-and-breakfast and local museum, and is often reported to be haunted.[119] The Art Chateau, at one time home to Clark's son, Charles, was designed in the image of a French château, and houses the Butte-Silver Bow Arts Foundation.[120]

Above Butte on the northeast edge of the city is the Our Lady of the Rockies statue, a 90-foot (27 m) statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary, dedicated to women and mothers everywhere, atop the Continental Divide.[121] The statue was airlifted to the site on December 17, 1985, after six years of construction.[122] Butte is also home to the U.S. High Altitude Speed Skating Center, an outdoor speed-skating rink used as a training location for World Cup skaters.[123]

Throughout uptown and western Butte are over ten underground mine headframes that are remnants from the town's mining industry. These include the Anselmo, the Steward, the Original, the Travona, the Belmont, the Kelly, the Mountain Con, the Lexington, the Bell/Diamond, the Granite Mountain, and the Badger. As part of a community project started around 2004, several headframes were repainted and outlined with LED lights which are illuminated at night.[124]

Events and traditions

St. Patrick's Day festival in Butte; the city is home to the largest number of Irish Americans per capita of any city in the United States.[99]

Butte's longstanding Irish Catholic community (the largest per capita of any U.S. city)[99] has been celebrated annually on St. Patrick's Day since 1882. Each year, about 30,000 revelers[125] converge on Butte's Uptown district to enjoy the parade led by the Ancient Order of Hibernians.[99] Also, local descendants of Finnish Americans celebrate St. Urho's Day every year on March 16.[126][127][128]

A larger annual celebration is Evel Knievel Days, held on the last weekend of July, celebrating Evel Knievel (a Butte native).[129] The weekend-long event, held in Uptown Butte, features various stunt performances, sporting competitions, fundraisers, and live music.[129]

Butte is perhaps becoming most renowned for the regional Montana Folk Festival[3] held on the second weekend in July. This event began its run in Butte as the National Folk Festival from 2008 to 2010 and in 2011 made the transition to a free-of-admission music festival.[130] Also in the summer is Butte's Fourth of July Parade and Fireworks show.[131] In 2008, Barack Obama spent the last Fourth of July before his presidency campaigning in Butte, taking in the parade with his family, and celebrating his daughter Malia Obama's 10th birthday.[132]

Butte's legacy of immigrants lives on in the form of various local cuisine, including the Cornish pasty, popularized by mine workers who needed something easy to eat in the mines, the povitica—a Slavic nut bread pastry which is a holiday favorite sold in many supermarkets and bakeries in Butte[133]—and the boneless porkchop sandwich.[3][134] The Pekin Noodle Parlor in Uptown is the oldest family-owned, continuously operating Chinese restaurant in the U.S.[135]

Environmental concerns

Berkeley Pit

Because its water contains high concentrations of metals such as copper and zinc, the Berkeley Pit is listed as a federal Superfund site.

After the Berkeley Pit mining operation closed in 1982, pipes that pumped groundwater out of the pit were turned off, resulting in the pit slowly filling with groundwater, creating an artificial lake.[66] Only two years later the pit was classified as a Superfund site and an environmental hazard site. The water in the pit is contaminated with various hard metals, such as arsenic, cadmium, and zinc.[66]

It was not until the 1990s that serious efforts to clean up the Berkeley Pit began. The situation gained even more attention after as many as 342 migrating geese chose the pit lake as a resting place, resulting in their deaths.[66] Steps have since been taken to prevent a recurrence, including but not limited to loudspeakers broadcasting sounds to scare off waterfowl. In November 2003, the Horseshoe Bend treatment facility went online and began treating and diverting much of the water that would have flowed into the pit.[136] The Berkeley Pit is both a Superfund site and tourist attraction, viewable from an observation deck.[66] Per a 2014 report, scientists believe the Berkeley Pit may reach the critical water level—potentially contaminating Silver Bow Creek—by 2023.[136] Beginning in 2019, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered the Montana Resources and Atlantic Richfield Co. to begin treating water from the pit, which is to then be discharged into Silver Bow Creek at a rate of 7,000,000 US gallons (26,000,000 L) per day.[136] Nikia Greene, EPA project manager for mine flooding, said in 2014: "The pit is a giant bathtub. There's a hydraulic gradient into the pit. We will never let the water reach the critical level."[136]

Upper Clark Fork River

The Upper Clark Fork River, with Butte at the headwaters, is America's largest Superfund site, spanning 100 miles (160 km).[137] This area takes in the cities of Butte, Anaconda, and Missoula. Butte's mining and smelting activity resulted in significant contamination of the Butte Hill as well as downstream and downwind areas. The contaminated land extends along a corridor of 120 miles (190 km) that reaches to Milltown and takes in adjacent areas such as the Anaconda smelter site. Contaminated sediment flooded out from abandoned mines was the root cause of the pollution at the headwaters of the Clark Fork River.[138]

Between the upstream city of Butte and the downstream city of Missoula lies the Deer Lodge Valley. By the 1970s, local citizens and agency personnel were increasingly concerned over the toxic effects of arsenic and heavy metals on environment and human health. The Anaconda Copper Mining Corporation (ACM), which merged with the Atlantic Richfield Corporation (ARCO) in 1977, is considered one of the parties responsible for the contamination.[139] Shortly thereafter, in 1983, ARCO ceased mining and smelting operations in the Butte-Anaconda area.[140]

For more than a century, the Anaconda Copper Mining company mined ore from Butte and smelted it in Butte (until c. 1920) and Anaconda. During this time, the Anaconda smelter released up to 40 short tons (36 t) per day of arsenic, 1,700 short tons (1,540 t) per day of sulfur, and great quantities of lead and other heavy metals into the air.[141] In Butte, mine tailings were dumped directly into Silver Bow Creek, creating a 150 miles (240 km) plume of pollution extending down the valley to Milltown Dam on the Clark Fork River, just upstream of Missoula. Air- and waterborne pollution poisoned livestock and agricultural soils throughout the Deer Lodge Valley. Modern environmental cleanup efforts have continued into the 21st century.[d]

Sports

Playing for the Pioneer Baseball League, the Butte Copper Kings were first active from 1979 to 1985, then 1987–2000; as of 2018, the team is known as the Grand Junction Rockies.[143] In 2017, the 3 Legends Stadium ballpark opened.[144]

Hockey teams from Butte have included the Butte Irish (America West Hockey League) active from 1996 to 2002, after which they became the Wichita Falls Wildcats;[145] and the Butte Roughriders (Northern Pacific Hockey League), active from 2003 to 2011.[146] The Butte Cobras, a Western States Hockey League team, was active from 2014 to 2017.[147] The Cobras then bought the Glacier Nationals franchise in the North American 3 Hockey League (NA3HL) for the 2017–18 season,[148] but the team went dormant prior to playing the season.[149] They eventually began playing in the NA3HL for the 2018–19 season.

The Butte Daredevils (Continental Basketball Association), active from 2006 to 2008, were named for Butte native Evel Knievel.[150]

University teams include the Montana Tech Orediggers, who have competed in the Frontier Conference of the NAIA since the league's founding in 1952. The school hosts men's and women's basketball, football, golf, and women's volleyball.[151]

In October 2020, Butte was awarded a team in the Expedition League to begin play in May 2021.[152]

Transportation

The city is served by the Butte Bus system, which operates within Butte as well as to the Montana Tech campus and nearby Walkerville.[153] Intercity bus service is provided by Jefferson Lines and Salt Lake Express.[154] Bert Mooney Airport has commercial flights on Delta Connection Airlines and Horizon Air.[155]

Butte can be accessed via Interstate 15 from north–south, and Interstate 90 from east–west; the two intersect in Butte, making Butte and Billings the only cities in Montana situated at a juncture of two interstate highways. The city can also be accessed from the south via Montana Highway 2 (Old U.S. Route 10).[156]

The Union Pacific Railroad until 1971 ran the Butte Special from Butte, south to Idaho Falls, then to Salt Lake City. Until 1979 Butte was served by Amtrak's ChicagoSeattle North Coast Hiawatha train.

Education

Entrance of Montana Tech. A statue of Marcus Daly by Augustus Saint-Gaudens sits at the entrance.

Public education is provided by Butte Public Schools. Butte High School enrolls around 1,300 students.[157] In correspondence with the Butte Public Schools system, the Butte Education Foundation was established in 2006, which aims to revitalize the public schools in an effort to attract new businesses and residents.[158] In the foundation's mission statement, it is noted that there is a "need to demonstrate a genuine and ongoing commitment to public education. Schools are often the first thing visitors ask about when looking at Butte as a potential new home."[158]

There are several private schools in Butte: The Butte Central Catholic High School operates under the Diocese of Helena,[159] which also operates Butte Central Elementary, a Catholic elementary school.[160] Other private elementary schools include the Silver Bow Montessori School.[161]

The first institute of higher education in Butte was the Montana School of Mines, which was established in 1889, the year of Montana's statehood.[162] The university changed its name to Montana Tech in the mid-20th century, and in 1994 became affiliated with the University of Montana.[163] The university specializes in engineering as well as geologic and hydrogeologic research.[162] It was ranked no. 4 by the U.S. News & World Report in 2017 for "Best Regional Colleges in the West."[163] Montana Tech of the University of Montana officially changed its name to Montana Technological University in 2018.[164] Montana Technological University is also home to Highlands College, a two-year college that grants associate's and trade degrees.[165]

Media

Radio and television

Major AM stations in Butte are KBOW AM 550 (country) and KXTL 1370 (oldies and talk radio).[166] FM stations include KAPC 91.3 Montana Public Radio (via the University of Montana); KAAR 92.5 (country); KOPR 94.1 (classic rock), KMBR 95.5 (mainstream rock), KQRV 96.9 (country), KGLM 97.7 (contemporary), KMSM-FM 103.9 (variety), and KBMF 102.5 community radio (classical; via Montana State University).[166]

Butte shares its Nielsen market with nearby Bozeman, with which it forms the 194th largest TV market in the United States. Local television stations include: KXLF (Channel 4), a CBS/CW affiliate, and the oldest broadcast television station in the state of Montana; KTVM (Channel 6), an NBC affiliate with additional programming from nearby KECI-TV in Missoula; KUSM (Channel 9), a PBS affiliate broadcasting out of Montana State University in Bozeman; and KWYB (Channel 19), an ABC/FOX affiliate and last of the "Big Three" networks to come into the market (1992). Prior to this Butte's ABC feeds came from KUSA-TV in Denver, Colorado and FOX from now-defunct Butte station KBTZ.[167]

Newspapers

Butte has one local daily, a weekly paper, as well as several papers from around the state. The Montana Standard is Butte's daily paper. It was founded in 1928 and is the result of The Butte Miner and the Anaconda Standard merging into one daily paper.[168] The Standard is owned by Lee Enterprises. The Butte Weekly is another local paper.[169]

In popular culture

Film and television

Butte has appeared in numerous films. The first film to notably feature Butte was Evel Knievel (1971), a biopic of Evel Knievel, a Butte native.[170] The 1976 thriller The Killer Inside Me, starring Stacy Keach and Susan Tyrrell and set in small-town Montana, was partially shot in Butte in September 1974.[171] The city was featured in Runaway Train (1985), shot in part on the Butte, Anaconda and Pacific Railway,[172] and in the miniseries Return to Lonesome Dove (1993).[173] Other films shot in Butte include F.T.W. (1994).[174]

The animated film Beavis and Butt-head Do America (1996) depicts Butte.[175] In 2004, the Wim Wenders film Don't Come Knocking was set and shot in Butte.[176] In 2015, the SyFy-produced horror film Dead 7, which starred Nick Carter and AJ McLean of the Backstreet Boys, as well as Joey Fatone of NSYNC, was shot at the city's Anselmo Mine yards.[177] The 2019 film Juanita is set in Butte.[citation needed]

The city has been subject of several documentary films, including Die Vergessene Stadt: Butte, Montana (1992), a German documentary by Thomas Schadt,[178] and Butte, America (2008), narrated by Gabriel Byrne.[179]

Literary depictions

One of the earliest literary depictions of Butte was by Mary MacLane, a diarist who wrote of her life growing up in the town at the turn of the 20th century. Her diaries are published under the title I Await the Devil's Coming, and have been credited as a progenitor of confessional writing.[180] Butte answers to the unflattering description of the fictional city of Poisonville in Dashiell Hammett's novel Red Harvest, which also alludes to the 1920 Anaconda Road Massacre.[181] The 1980 novel The Butte Polka by Donald McCaig also incorporates the city's mining history into its plot, featuring a character who goes missing from his post at a Butte copper mine.[182]

More contemporary literary depictions of Butte can be found in 1998's Buster Midnight's Cafe by Sandra Dallas[183] and Jon A. Jackson's historical fiction novel Go By Go, which depicts the 1917 Speculator Mine disaster.[184] Ivan Doig's 2010 novel Work Song and 2013 novel Sweet Thunder are set in Butte in 1919 and 1920 respectively, after World War I.[185] Michael Corrigan's Confessions of a Shanty Irishman has a chapter-story set in Butte during the Speculator mining disaster and riots.[citation needed]

Novelist Marian Jensen has published a mystery series, Mining City Mysteries, which is set in Butte and the surrounding region.[186]

Notable people

Sister cities

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Refer to map of Butte via Google Maps.[81]
  2. ^ While the U.S. Census data shows a population of around 60,000 in 1920, a city directory from 1917 notes Butte's population as being 91,000, while the 1918 directory estimates 93,000. The variance between 1918 and the 1920 census is reflected in the city directories, which fall to 60,000 after 1920.[100] The variance in population reports has been attributed to the city's near-constant fluctuation of visitors, immigrants, and temporary boarders during this time.[101]
  3. ^ Since the city and county did not consolidate until 1977, prior election results reflect the county only and not the city.
  4. ^ As of 2018, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) maintains a database entry detailing the Silver Bow Creek/Butte area's pollution and cleanup efforts.[142]

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Works cited

Further reading

Pollution and toxic cleanup

Bibliographic materials

  • Barnett, Harold C. Toxic Debts and the Superfund Dilemma (University of North Carolina Press, 1994)
  • Barry, Bridget R. "Toxic Tourism: Promoting the Berkeley Pit and Industrial Heritage in Butte, Montana." (2012). online
  • Bookspan, Shelley. "Junk It, or Junket?" Public Historian (2001) 23#2 pp. 5–8 in JSTOR
  • Capek, Stella M. 1992. Environmental Justice, Regulation, and the Local Community." International Journal of Health Services 22(4):729–746.
  • Chess, C. and Purcell, K. 1999. Public participation and the environment: Do we know what works? Environmental Science and Technology 33(16): 2685–2692.
  • Church, Thomas W. and Robert T. Nakamura. 1993. Cleaning up the Mess: Implementation Strategies in Superfund (Washington: The Brookings Institution).
  • Covello VT and Mumpower J. 1985 "Risk Analysis and Risk Management: A Historical Perspective", Risk Analysis 5(2): 103–120.
  • Dobb, Edwin. 1999. "Mining the Past." High Country News 31 (11): 1–10.
  • Dobb, Edwin. 1996. "Pennies from Hell: In Montana, the Bill for America's Copper Comes Due." Harper's Magazine (293): 39–54.
  • Langewiesche, William. 2001. "The Profits of Doom—One of the Most Polluted Cities in America Learns to Capitalize on Its Contamination" The Atlantic Monthly (April 2001): 56–62.
  • Levine, Mark. 1996. "As the Snake Did Away with the Geese." Outside Magazine 21 (September 1996): 74–84.
  • Edelstein, Michael R. 2003. Contaminated Communities: Coping with Residential Toxic Exposure Westview Press.
  • Folk, Ellison. "Public Participation in the Superfund Cleanup Process", Ecology Law Quarterly 18 (1991), 173–221.
  • Hird, J. A. 1993. "Environmental Policy and Equity: the case of Superfund." Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 12: 323–343.
  • Munday, Pat. 2002. "'A millionaire couldn't buy a piece of water as good:' George Grant and the Conservation of the Big Hole River Watershed." Montana: The Magazine of Western History 52 (2): 20–37.
  • Okrusch, Chad Michael. "Pragmatism and environmental problem-solving: A systematic moral analysis of democratic decision-making in Butte, Montana" (PhD. Diss. University of Oregon, 2010) online
  • Quivik, Fredric. 2004. "Of Tailings, Superfund Litigation, and Historians as Experts: U.S. v. Asarco, et al. (the Bunker Hill Case in Idaho)." The Public Historian 26 (1): 81–104.
  • Probst, K. et al. 2002. "Superfund's Future: What Will It Cost?" Environmental Forum, 19 (2 ): 32–41.
  • Tesh, Sylvia. 1999. "Citizen experts in environmental risk." Policy Studies 32 (1): 39–58.
  • Teske, N. 2000. "A tale of two TAGs: Dialogue and democracy in the superfund program." American Behavioral Scientist. 44 (4): 664–678.

Web resources

  • United States Environmental Protection Agency. 2005a. Region 8 – Superfund: Citizen's Guide to Superfund. Updated December 27, 2005. www.epa.gov/ Accessed 27Dec.05.
  • ______. 2005b. "EPA Region 8—Environmental Justice (EJ) Program." Updated March 24, 2005). www.epa.gov/region8/ej/ Accessed 05.Jan.06.
  • ______. 2004a. Superfund Cleanup Proposal, Butte Priority Soils Operable Unit of the Silver Bow Creek/Butte Area Superfund Site, epa.gov, accessed December 20, 2004.
  • ______. 2004b. "Clark Fork River Record of Decision", available at epa.gov
  • ______. 2002a. Superfund Community Involvement Toolkit. EPA 540-K-01-004.*
  • ______. 2002b. "Butte Benefits from a $78 Million Cleanup Agreement." Available at epa.gov
  • ______. 1998. Superfund Community Involvement Handbook and Toolkit. Washington, DC: Office of Emergency and Remedial Response.
  • ______. 1996. "EPA Superfund Record of Decision R08-96/112." Available at epa.gov
  • ______. 1992. "Environmental Equity: Reducing Risk for All Communities." EPA A230-R-92-008; two volumes (June 1992).
  • Society for Applied Anthropology. 2005. "SFAA Project Townsend, Case Study Three, The Clark Fork Superfund Sites in Western Montana." sfaa.net, accessed November 23, 2005
  • Montana Environmental Information Center. 2005. "Federal Superfund: EPA's Plan for Butte Priority Soils." Available at meic.org
  • Murray, C. and D.R. Marmorek. 2004. "Adaptive Management: A science-based approach to managing ecosystems in the face of uncertainty." Prepared for presentation at the Fifth International Conference on Science and Management of Protected Areas: Making Ecosystem Based Management Work, Victoria, British Columbia, May 11–16, 2003. ESSA Technologies, BC, Canada.
  • National Academy of Sciences. 2005. The National Academy of Sciences Report on Superfund and Mining Megasites: Lessons from the Coeur d'Alene River Basin. Available at epa.gov
  • Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. 2005. "Cut and Run: EPA Betrays Another Montana Town—A Tale of Butte, the Largest Superfund Site in the United States." News release (August 18, 2005), peer.org, accessed September 15, 2005
  • Southland, Elizabeth. 2003. "Megasites: Presentation for the NACEPT—Superfund Subcommittee." www.epa.gov/oswer/docs/naceptdocs/megasites.pdf, accessed April 22, 2005.

Academic resources

  • Center for Public Environmental Oversight. 2002. "Roundtable on Long-term Management in the Cleanup of Contaminated Sites." Report from a roundtable held in Washington, DC, June 28, 2002, cpeo.org, accessed December 19, 2005.
  • Case, Bridgette Dawn. "The women's protective union: Union women activists in a union town, 1890-1929" (PhD Dissertation. Montana State University-Bozeman, 2004) online
  • Curran, Mary E. 1996. "The Contested Terrain of Butte, Montana: Social Landscapes of Risk and Resiliency." Master's thesis, University of Montana.
  • LeCain, Timothy. 1998. "Moving Mountains: Technology and Environment in Western Copper Mining." PhD Dissertation, University of Delaware.
  • Quivik, Frederic. 1998. "Smoke and Tailings: An Environmental History of Copper Smelting Technologies in Montana, 1880–1930." PhD Dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.

Other

  • Mercier, Laurie. 2001. Anaconda: Labor, Community, and Culture in Montana's Smelter City (University of Illinois Press).
  • Parrett, Aaron (2015). Literary Butte: A History in Novels & Film. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-626-19836-4.
  • Toole, K. Ross. 1954. "A History of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company: A Study in the Relationships between a State and its People and a Corporation, 1880–1950." PhD Dissertation, University of California-Los Angeles.

Primary sources

External links

Local resources

Photographs and media