OK defosterf and all the rest of you meatheads. Get out your Atlas and find Idaho. That's good, now up in the Northern Panhandle find Interstate 90. At the far east side (to the right, numbskulls) is the Montana border. I-90 crosses Lookout Pass at about 7000 feet.
Now, heading west....to the left....the first town you hit is Mullan and the last town we'll cover to today is Kellogg. Can you find Kellogg on your map? That entire stretch is known as The Silver Valley for....can you guess? Silver mining. This 20 mile stretch is in a deep canyon that at times is only 200 yards or so wide...if that. The mountains along there rise up anywhere from 8,000 to 9500 feet above the valley floor. In the mining heyday, the mines were located mostly in the upper stretches of the canyon from up near the pass to Wallace. The smelters were located in Kellogg as it is downhill from Mullan and made moving the ore an easier job. The silver ore was broken up and somewhat processed along that canyon in various areas. Like the Compressor District, the Crusher District and so on. A narrow gauage RR took the ore from place to place.
Wallace was about in the middle and thus became headquarters for the miners. Well, where there's miners there's liquor, and where there's liquor there's women. And thus Wallace became a famous Bordello Town of the Idaho Panhandle. The Houses of ill repute actually continued in operation until the mid 1980's. The city of Wallace, seeing $$ signs from this actually turned one of the old houses into "The Bordello Museum."
That area is deep in the canyon, from Mullan to Kellogg, and the Interstate winds through there like a snake. If a speed limit sign says 45 MPH, it means just that. The guard rails along that stretch bear witness to those who think the signs are kidding.
That's all for today class. Tomorrow we will cover the history of Two Dot and Ringling Montana.
Anyone for a Weenie Roast?