Montana isn't the coldest state. Still, brrr-wise, it's pretty chill.
The names people choose to use about things and places tell us much about them and about their relationship to those things.
Montanans have a sky and timber they call big and falls they call great.
Yes, but especially, they also have creeks named "Starve to Death" and "Froze to Death."
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Fergus Co Argus, October 2, 1884 |
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Fergus Co Argus, January 28, 1886
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Gruwell was quite the contrarian. I wonder what happened to him? [He seemed to be flourishing, in Miles City, seven years later.]
A century or so ago, in Montana, there were plenty of tales of freezing cattle and other livestock, but stories about people's freezing legs and hands and faces were also common.
And, of course, people often froze
to death.
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Fergus Co Argus, April 2, 1885 |
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Unfortunate popsiclization |
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Fergus Co Argus, January 27, 1887 |
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Fergus Co Argus, February 16, 1893 |
—In the
rabbit's bed, I assume.
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Fergus Co Argus, March 2, 1893 |
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Fergus Co Argus, January 31, 1895 |
We'll hear more about the unfortunate Mr. Van Dorn in a moment.
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Fergus Co Argus, February 21, 1895 |
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Fergus Co Argus, September 19, 1895 |
Poor old Van Dorn's troubles deepened. At least the asylum was clean and well kept!
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Fergus County, Argus, September 19, 1895 |
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Fergus Co Argus, February 6, 1896 |
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Fergus Co Argus, December 8, 1897 |
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Fergus Co Argus, March 9, 1898 |
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Fergus Co Argus, March 23, 1898 |
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Fergus Co Argus, March 1, 1899 |
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Fergus Co Argus, November 21, 1900 |
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Fergus Co Argus, March 26, 1902 |
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Fergus County Argus, February 15, 1905 |
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Fergus Co Argus, December 1, 1905 |
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Fergus Co Argus, December 8, 1905 |
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Fergus Co Argus, December 12, 1905 |
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