Five Montana sites recommended for National Register inclusion
Five properties across Montana are being nominated for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Properties.
All five nominations were recommended for forwarding by the governor-appointed Montana Historic Preservation Review Board, according to the Montana Historical Society. The volunteer board is part of the State Historic Preservation Office.
The nominations are for sites across Montana, including Billings, Havre, Great Falls, Butte, and a five-mile stretch of highway near Pipestone Pass, between Butte and Whitehall.
Recommendations include:
• A five-mile stretch of scenic highway that used to be part of the Yellowstone Trail in Silver Bow County known as the Harding Way Historic District near Pipestone Pass. With its steep switchbacks and small pull-out areas, it represents the transition from wagons to automobiles in the 1920s and provided a needed link between Butte and Whitehall.
• A long-term Queen Anne-style duplex rental not included in the original Butte-Anaconda Historic District due to a documentation error. Built around 1895, the handsome Victorian building was home to a wide variety of Butte’s population, some staying for several decades.
• The century-old Crystal Ice & Fuel Company Building in downtown Billings, which historically supplied fire (coal) and ice to area residents and businesses. Even with recent renovations, the building is a throwback to the days of charitable coal donations to the poor; threats of Teamster strikes; and offers of free ice to Spanish Flu victims. The building also hosted a number of different businesses since its original use by the Crystal Ice & Fuel Company.
• The Northern Montana College Girls Residence Hall on the Montana State University-Northern Campus in Havre. The construction of the building showed the college’s serious intent to provide quality higher education along Montana’s northern tier. It stands as an example of the Depression-era Public Works Administration program and was designed by prominent Havre architect Frank Bossuot.
• The colorful, sometimes notorious three-story Baatz Block, housed a former tavern/cabaret, hotel and apartments. Built in 1913 for $40,000, the structure is one block south of the Great Falls Central Business Historic District. Not long after the completion of the Baatz Block, several businesses, predominantly the hotel and bar, garnered law enforcement attention for liquor violations and solicitation, a trend that dogged the businesses and some residents of the building for years, according to the nomination. Within months of the building’s opening, the Great Falls Tribune reported the arrest of three gentlemen in a gambling raid in the Baatz Saloon.