Montana Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
Montana Famous Firsts, Montana Interesting Facts, Montana Trivia
Car Washers Dream!
Every spring nearly 10,000 white pelicans with a wingspan of
nine feet migrate from the Gulf of Mexico to Medicine Lake in
northeastern Montana.
More Montana Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
- Montana has the largest migratory elk herd in the nation.
- The state boasts the largest breeding population of trumpeter
swans in the lower United States.
- At the Rocky Mountain Front Eagle Migration Area west of Great
Falls more golden eagles have been seen in a single day than
anywhere else in the country.
- North of Missoula is the largest population of nesting common
loons in the western United States.
- The average square mile of land contains 1.4 elk, 1.4 pronghorn
antelope, and 3.3 deer.
- The Freezeout Lake Wildlife Management Area contains as many as
300,000 snow geese and 10,000 tundra swans during migration.
- At Bowdoin National Wildlife Refuge it is possible to see up to
1,700 nesting pelicans.
- The Montana Yogo Sapphire is the only North American gem to be
included in the Crown Jewels of England.
- In 1888 Helena had more millionaires per capita than any other
city in the world.
- 46 out of Montana's 56 counties are considered "frontier
counties" with an average population of 6 or fewer people per square
mile.
- At Egg Mountain near Choteau dinosaur eggs have been discovered
supporting the theory some dinosaurs were more like mammals and
birds than like reptiles.
- Montana is the only state with a triple divide allowing water to
flow into the Pacific, Atlantic, and Hudson Bay. This phenomenon
occurs at Triple Divide Peak in Glacier National Park.
- The notorious outlaw, Henry Plummer, built the first jail
constructed in the state.
- No state has as many different species of mammals as Montana.
- The moose, now numbering over 8,000 in Montana, was thought to
be extinct in the Rockies south of Canada in the 1900s.
- Flathead Lake in northwest Montana contains over 200 square
miles of water and 185 miles of shoreline. It is considered the
largest natural freshwater lake in the west.
- Miles City is known as the Cowboy Capitol.
- Yellowstone National Park in southern Montana and northern
Wyoming was the first national park in the nation.
- The town of Ekalaka was named for the daughter of the famous
Sioux chief, Sitting Bull.
- Fife is named after the type of wheat grown in the area or, as
some locals contend, by Tommy Simpson for his home in Scotland.
- Fishtail is named for either a Mr. Fishtail who lived in the
area or as the area Indians prefer for some of the peaks in the
nearby Beartooth Mountain Range which look like the tail of a fish.
- The Yaak community is the most northwestern settlement in the
state.
- Montana has the largest grizzly bear population in the lower 48
states.
- Near the Pines Recreation Area as many as 100 sage grouse
perform their extraordinary spring mating rituals.
- The first luge run in North America was built at Lolo Hot
Springs on Lolo Pass in 1965.
- Combination, Comet, Keystone, Black Pine, and Pony are names of
Montana ghost towns.
- Virginia City was founded in 1863 and is considered to be the
most complete original town of its kind in the United States.
- Montana is nicknamed the Treasure State.
- The bitterroot is the official state flower.
- The density of the state is six people per square mile.
- The highest point in the state is Granite Peak at 12,799 feet.
- The most visited place in Montana is Glacier National Park,
known as the crown jewel of the continent. It lies along Montana's
northern border and adjoins Waterton Lakes National Park in Canada,
forming the world's first International Peace Park.
- Buffalo in the wild can still be viewed at the National Bison
Range in Moiese, south of Flathead Lake and west of the Mission
Mountains.
- Montana's first territorial capital, Bannack, has been preserved
as a ghost town state park along once gold-laden Grasshopper Creek.
- The Old West comes to life through the brush and sculpture of
famed western artist Charlie Russell at the Charles M. Russell
Museum Complex in Great Falls. The museum contains the world's
largest collection of Russell's work, his original log-cabin studio
and his Great Falls home.
- The Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman gained fame through the
work of its chief paleontologist, Jack Horner. Horner was the
prototype for the character Dr. Alan Grant in the best selling
novel/movie, "Jurassic Park."
- Montana's rivers and streams provide water for three oceans and
three of the North American continent's major river basins.
- Just south of Billings, Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer and his
troops made their last stand. Little Bighorn Battlefield National
Monument features the Plains Indians and United States military
involved in the historic battle.
- The western meadowlark is the official state bird.
- The first inhabitants of Montana were the Plains Indians.
- Montana is home to seven Indian reservations.
- Every spring nearly 10,000 white pelicans with a wingspan of
nine feet migrate from the Gulf of Mexico to Medicine Lake in
northeastern Montana.
- The Going to the Sun Road in Glacier Park is considered one of
the most scenic drives in America.
- The state's official animal is the grizzly bear.
- The state's motto Oro y Plata means gold and silver.
- Montana's name comes from the Spanish word mountain.
- In Montana the elk, deer and antelope populations outnumber the
humans.
- Glacier National Park has 250 lakes within its boundaries.
- Hill County has the largest county park in the United States.
Beaver Creek Park measures 10 miles long and 1 mile wide.
- Competing with the D River in Lincoln City, Oregon for the title of the world's shortest river, the Roe River flows near Great Falls. Both rivers lengths vary from 58 feet to 200 feet. The source for this small river is Giant Springs, the largest freshwater spring in the United States.
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