Online Encyclopedia

HELENA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 220 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HELENA  , a

city and the county-seat of Lewis and Clark county,
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Montana, U.S.A., and the capital of the state, at the E.
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base of the main range of the Rocky Mountains, 8o m . N.E. of Butte, at an altitude of about 4000 ft . Pop . (188o) 3624; (1890) 13,834; (1900) 10,770, of whom 2993 were
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foreign-born; (1910 census) 12,515 . It is served by the
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Great
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Northern and the Northern Pacific
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railways . Helena is delightfully situated with Mt Helena as a background in the hollow of the Prickly Pear valley, a rich agricultural region surrounded by
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rolling hills and lofty mountains, and contains many
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fine buildings, including the state capitol, county court house, the Montana club house, high school, the
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cathedral of St Helena, a federal
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building, and the
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United States assay office . It is the seat of the Montana Wesleyan University (Methodist Episcopal), founded in 1890; St Aloysius College and St Vincent's Academy (
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Roman Catholic); and has a public library with about 35,000 volumes, the Montana state library with about 40,000 volumes, and the state law library with about 24,000 volumes . The city is the commercial and
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financial centre of the state (Butte being the
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mining centre), and is one of the richest cities in the United States in proportion to its population . It has large railway car-shops, extensive smelters and
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quartz crushers (at East Helena), and various manufacturing establishments; the value of the factory product in 19o5 was $1,309,746, an increase of 68.9 % over that of 'goo . The surrounding country abounds in gold- and
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silver-bearing quartz deposits, and it is estimated that from the famous Last Chance Gulch alone, which runs across the city, more than $40,000,000 in gold has been taken . The street railway and the
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lighting
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system of the city are run by power generated at a plant and 40 ft.
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dam at Canyon Ferry, on the
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Missouri
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river, 18 m . E. of Helena .

There is another great power plant at

Hauser Plant, 20 m . of Helena . Three miles W. of the city is the Broadwater Natatorium with swimming
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pool, 300 ft. long and loo ft. wide, the
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water for which is furnished by hot springs with a temperature at the source of 16o° . Fort Harrison, a United States army
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post, is situated 3 M . W. of the city . Helena was established as a placer mining camp in 1864 upon the
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discovery of gold in Last Chance Gulch . The
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town was laid out in the same
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year, and after the organization of Montana Territory it was designated as the capital . Helena was burned down in 1869 and in 1874 . It was chartered as a city in 1881 .

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