St. Mary’s Mission in Stevensville

WESTERN MONTANA’S

BITTERROOT VALLEY HISTORY

     The Bitterroot Valley, approximately 96 miles long and 20 miles wide at mid-valley, was the ancestral home of the Salish (Flathead) Indian tribe long before the white man ever set foot in the valley.  The Indians gathered and ate the starchy root of the succulent Bitterroot plant.  The small pink blossoms of this plant prompted the naming of the Bitterroot River and surrounding mountains and earned further prominence by becoming the Montana State Flower.

     The first white men came to the valley on September 4, 1805 when the Lewis & Clark expedition entered the valley near Lost Trail Pass.  Approaching

 the present day location of Sula, the expedition met a party of Salish

Indians.  Captain Clark wrote “These people received us friendly. 

I was the first white man on the water of this river.”  The expedition

camped at Traveler’s Rest at the mouth of Lolo Creek before

venturing over the Bitterroot Mountain Range on their way to the

Pacific.

     In 1824 the Hudson Bay Company sent a party under the

command of Alexander Ross into the valley.

     In 1842 Father Pierre, Jean DeSmet and 5 associates entered the valley at the request of the Salish Indians.  The St. Mary’s Mission and the first church in Montana were built in Stevensville in 1845.  Father Ravalli came to the Mission in 1845.  He was the first doctor in the area and the county bears his name today.  Fort Owen, the first white settlement in Montana was established at Stevensville in 1850.  The

Catholic priests called the river “St. Mary’s”.  However, the valley, river and mountain range are now named after Montana’s state flower, the Bitterroot.  The flower has a fleshy root and provided a steady food supply for the Indians long ago.

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Nez Perce people dancing at the Big Hole Battlefield on the anniversary of the surprise attack on their people by the U.S. Cavalry.

Chief Joseph, 250-400 Nez Perce warriors and their families passed through the valley in their futile flight to freedom in Canada, in what is known as the Nez Perce

Indian War of 1877.  Their attempt to maintain their freedom and avoid the reservation was the only time the Nez Perce fought the whites.

     Marcus Daly, one of Montana’s famous copper kings, came to the Bitterroot in 1888, lured by timber needed for his Butte mines and our mild climate.  He purchased 22,000 acres, established the Bitterroot Stock Farm, and built the now famous Daly Mansion east of Hamilton.  In 1890 Daly brought James Hamilton & Robert O’Hara from Minnesota to develop a planned community.  The town was named after Hamilton & O’Hara was the first mayor.  Hamilton was incorporated about 1894.

     In 1891 Chief Charlo and the Salish Indians, who had befriended the white settlers for 86 years now, were forced from their ancestral home.  They were one of the few tribes to never do battle with the white man.  In October of 1891, the Salish tribe traveled 66 miles north of Stevensville and were settled on the Flathead Reservation in the Jocko Valley north of Missoula.  The valley now belonged solely to the white settlers.  The Salish people still come to the valley on a religious pilgrimage to visit the “Medicine Tree”, an important religious symbol for their people located along Hwy 93 south of Conner.