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Location of Flathead County in Montana. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Flathead County, Montana. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Flathead County, Montana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and ...
Saleesh House, also known as Flathead Post, [1] was a North West Company fur trading post built near present-day Thompson Falls, Montana in 1809 by David Thompson and James McMillan of the North West Company. [2] It became a Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) post after that company merged with the North West Company in 1821. Under HBC control the post ...
The geography of the Flathead roughly corresponds to the valley where Flathead Lake is located, with two distinct ends – the northern (or upper) Flathead Valley and the southern (lower) Flathead Valley. In addition to Flathead and Whitefish lakes, the area's proximity to attractions such as Glacier National Park, Whitefish Mountain Resort ...
This is a list of properties and historic districts in Montana that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The state's more than 1,100 listings are distributed across all of its 56 counties .
The Trench in northwestern Montana was created by subsidence along a major extensional fault, which continues today. After the valley formed, glaciers flowing down the Trench from British Columbia, and into it from the surrounding mountain ranges left a flat valley floor and dammed the Flathead River drainage to create Flathead Lake.
The owner of Aviatori Coffee House in Springfield died while combating the Horse Gulch Fire in Montana on July 10. ... Dauntless Air is an aerial firefighting company based out of Idaho. Turchetti ...
Glimm, who termed out of the House in 2019 and has since served in the Senate, is the co-owner of Glimm Homes and was a previous president of the Montana Building Industry Association.
It is located on land of the Flathead Indian Reservation. The valley was named for Jacques Raphael Finlay, a trapper and fur trader in the area during 1806–1809. The Jocko Valley was the site of flooding in June 2011, when the Jocko River overflowed its banks as a result of a "200% of average" snowpack combined with heavy precipitation. [1]