Marysville Class Photo circa 1885

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Marysville Class Photo circa 1885

A wonderful photo of Marysville students in front of the school, probably dated about 1885.  Mary herself is in the photo.  She is the little girl standing farthest to the left directly in front of the doorway.  She appears to be about 8 or 9 years old.  This is one of – if not the – oldest photo in her collection.

The front reads:

Finished in 1886-12-11 by Albert Price.  Mrs. Annie Shea, Patsy Sullivan and Mrs. Mamie Shea, Jim O’Brien were the first graduates, 1891.

Here is the photo back:

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Back of “Marysville Class Photo circa 1885”

The note at the top of the back is:

White Lace is dear baby Valentine Schenck‘s – 1914-3-21.

And the names on the photo back are as follows:

1

2

3 Laura Budd

4 Lena Staples

5 Mary Ellen O’Connell (Mrs. Hollie Harring

6 Libbie O’Connell

7

8 Lottie Staples

9 Miller

10 Gecobie

11 Miller

12

13 Agnes Miskell (hdk [handkerchief] in hand

14 Lillie Conrad Lanstrom – light hair

15 Jno. Rumping

16 Jno. Slater

17 Mary Rumping Schenk Schaffer – pointed collar

18 Katie Schaffer

19 Dora Gecobie

20 Riga Barley

21 Frances Schaffer – Mason

22 Mary Plauzer – Mayo

23 Hattie Hebert

24 Phema Hebert – Derosier in front of Lou Ralston and Walters teachers.        They married later.

25 Mollie Hogan

26 Riga Barley – white collar [Riga Barley is also listed at #20 above]

27

28 Maggie Robertson

29 boy

30 Lizzie Ralston – white collar

31 boy

32 boy – hands folded

33 Lizzie Wilkensons Forlander

34 Jake Binn [?]

35 John (Tug) Sullivan

36 Geo. Barley

37

38 Steven Sullivan

39 Sam O’Connell – hands in his pocket

40 Joe Hable

41 Oscar Zemboch – dead

42 Wm Conrad – died 1929

43

44 Frank Plauzer

45

46 Mrs. Airy – dead

A note at the bottom of the photo back reads as follows:

Marysville’s first school house. Montana.

This school was enlarged to 6 rooms by Jim McCarty, Jim McKillican and finished by Alb. Price in 1898.


11914-3-2.  I’m confused about this date, since Valentine – Mary’s youngest daughter – was born on February 14, 1915 – and died on April 2, 1915.  Perhaps it was the date of her baptism?

On October 28, 1930 – “I walked to the extreme top of Mt. Helena . . .”

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Entry from Journal #1: October 28, 1930

I walked to the extreme top of Mt. Helena, around the volcanic cliffs.  It’s a grand sight & study to my brain and mind with its large and several openings leading to the interior to somewhere.  The top is a place for that and meditation after casting your eyes over the population & surrounding country.  I had my field glasses I got from Mrs. John Bowhay.

Mrs. Albine Setzer, Mrs. Mary Miskel, Mr. Wallace Burkhead died in those weeks.


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This is a photo of my mother – from the summer of 2014 – standing in the Benton Avenue Cemetery in Helena, with Mt. Helena in the background.  It was a beautiful evening as we visited the graves of her great grandfather and grand aunt.


Searching in Ancestry.com, I located the following records and information for the individuals referenced by Mary in this journal entry:

Continue reading

“Read over KGIR Butte, Mont. on March 30, 1946”

By Franklin D. Roosevelt Library Public Domain Photographs [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
On March 30, 1946, the following story, written by Mary and entitled Belmont-Montana, was read over the air on radio station KGIR out of Butte.  She won a $4 prize for the story.

Belmont-Montana: Written by Mrs. M. Schaffer Riordan

This picturesque and rich gold mining camp is a big flat– surrounded by the lofty Rockies and about a mile west of Marysville around the bend. It is about forgotten by many pioneers and not known of by the younger generation of today; even those living at Marysville.

My father, Mr. John H. Rumping, left St. Louis, Mo. for western adventure in 1878 coming by boat, the Fontenelle1, to Ft. Benton, Montana. He helped as an engineer. They were sent part way back from Indian attacks, but they buckled up and came on again to Ft. Benton.  From there, he took the covered wagons and helped going over mountains and prairie lands where Great Falls now is built, on to Silver City, Montana and up Silver Creek to Belmont over roads built on the mountain sides2.

Mr. J. Rumping helped build the Belmont mill in 1878-79. A fire later broke out on the entrances of the mine smothering seven miners3. The town had hundreds of miners, a store and a couple of saloons. The store was owned by Mr. Henry Jurgens and Price.  They later moved down to Marysville and Mr. George Padbury Sr. of Helena was the clerk and delivery boy. The tunnel had its blacksmith shop and forge at its entrance. Jurgens was sheriff in Helena 1896.

Mrs. Eva Rumping, John’s wife, came from St. Louis in 1879.  I, the first child, was a year old when she left.  We were three months on the way coming to Belmont June 7th, 1879.  Ed Conrad of Helena, my brother John Joseph (born in Belmont in 1881, he lives in Helena) and myself, are the yet living survivors of Belmont. John Joe Rumping was born in Belmont Mar. 19, 1881.

Belmont was found by Mr. Ed. Stemple, Sr.  There were two or three rasters (water wheels) along the creek from the mine.

Later Thomas Cruse, another miner of adventure, came from Ireland, around the Horn to Australia, then to Marysville, California and on to the new gold fields of Montana, on a beautiful black horse, stopping at Silver City first. It was the first town built in now Lewis & Clark County.

Holburt discovered gold bars at Prickley Pear gulch 1862, Aug. 18th, which built Silver City to 150 members. William Brown, William Meagher, Edgerton and others.  The first seat of Justice was here. Henry Jurgens and Courtands opened a store April 18, 1884.  Rich placer diggens were taken up in 1864-65. It was first known as Edgerton, then Silver City.

Jacob Fournais was its first settler. Indian squaws were married to some miners. Cruse came up Trinity gulch into Belmont and the place later called Marysville.

Mr. George Detweiler, a prospector, also came and had partly located & found rich float, but he went to the first Fair at Chicago and asked Cruse to finish locating it for him.  But on his return, Cruse located it in his name.  Detweiler is buried at Marysville.  Mr. Rumping was the first engineer at Cruse’s five-stamp mill.

Mr. and Mrs. Lightbody had the first boarding house. Other eating houses were Sampson’s, Peterson’s, Schaffer’s and Drum Lummond.

Cruse sold his mine to an English company and they called it the Drum Lummond Co.

Buschline Hotel, Drum Lummond Hotel, Masculine Hotel.

Ralstons came over Trinity early too and built the first two-story log house that still stands in the other new camp below Belmont. Thomas Cruse then named the new bonanza “Marysville” after Mrs. Mary Ralston.  It came to be the richest, happiest and most contented town in Montana.

On June 13, 1901-2, Mr. Frank Hauley, who now is a hoisting engineer at the Steward mine in Butte, and my first husband, Mr. George Schenck, drilled 27 1/8 and 31 7/8 inches in ten minutes and would drill anyone in Montana their weight of 145 lbs.  31 7/8 was the deepest ever drilled at Marysville by George Schenck and Frank Hauley.

All that’s left of Belmont now is the two old Longmaid buildings the miners used and the Montana Power Plant of Great Falls. Later Marysville went down for some years but is now being revived by Mr. Wade and a new mill that was built in 1944-45 soon burnt down.

Belmont had Bald Mt., Gloster, Empire, Towsley, Penobscot on the other westerly slopes. Bald Butte, Mt. Pleasant, Carter & Aickie are good mines played out.

Silver City was Montana’s first capital for a short while and George Detweiler finally owned the beautiful pearl handled revolver that was used as a gavel at its meetings and donated it to Mr. O. M. Lanstrum. Silver Creek had its Chineymen working the gold diggens and I remember their nice gardens.

In 1878-79 Marysville had beaver swamps and the road left the gulch and went up the mountain side behind Fabien and Snablins’ cabins (bought by Mr. Rumping about 1885, where my brother William and sister Maude later were born), and on up to Highland Street up to the mountain side again and on over the mountain side to Belmont.

The typewritten copy of the story was followed by this note:

This is more than I put in my story for K.G.I.R. radio station in Butte.


 1Fontanelle.  The Fontanelle was built in Pennsylvania in 1870.  It burned at New Orleans in 1873 but was rebuilt with a longer hull.  In the spring of 1881, it was crushed by ice upstream from Yankton, South Dakota.  Putz, Paul M. “Missouri Riverboat Wreckage Downstream from Yankton, South Dakota.” Nebraska History 64 (1983): 521-41. Nebraskahistory.org. Web. 14 Oct. 2015.
2roads built on the mountain sides.  In all likelihood, the “roads” he travelled would have been the Mullan Road.
3A fire later broke out on the entrances of the mine smothering seven miners. According to an article in The River Press (Ft. Benton, Mont.), there was a fire in Tunnel No. 3 of the Belmont mine at 1:00 a.m. on February 11, 1881.  The fire spread to the shaft near the blacksmith shop and then on to Tunnel No. 3, which then ignited a magazine with “Hercules Powder”.  It was reported that the explosion resembled the shock of an earthquake.  Eight men were working in the mine and two escaped with minor injuries.  The six men who died were: J. Shorter; H. McDonnell; Thomas Woods; James Kugur; — — Braslaw; and Pat Loughlin. The river press. (Fort Benton, Mont.), 16 Feb. 1881. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85053157/1881-02-16/ed-1/seq-8/>

The World Series: St. Louis at Philadelphia

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Entry from Journal #1: October 8, 1930

Those listening to the Radio of the Athletics and St. Louis at Philadelphia’s ball game1:  John L. Sullivan, Ralph, Tomie and William Williams Sr., Ed Washerton, Gordon O’Connell.


1Athletics and St. Louis at Philadelphia’s ball game.  The Philadelphia Athletics were at the top of the American League that year, with 102 wins and 52 losses.  The St. Louis Cardinals were top of the National League, with 92 wins and 62 losses.  This was Game 6 of the World Series, with Philadelphia winning 7 to 1.  It was Philadelphia’s second straight World Series.

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By Goudey [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

 

 

The pitcher, George Earnshaw, held the Cardinals scoreless until the ninth inning.