Distinctly Montana Magazine

2024 // Spring

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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72 D I S T I N C T LY M O N TA N A M A G A Z I N E • S P R I N G 2 0 2 4 W HETHER NAVIGATING THE SWITCHBACKS OF ONE OF MONTANA'S SERPENTINE MOUNTAIN HIGHWAYS or traveling along a stretch of blacktop running arrow-straight across the plains to the distant horizon, it is impossible not to notice the white crosses. They stand solemnly alongside the state's highways and interstates, flashing by with no particular ca- dence—one cross here, another six miles down the road, a cluster of five attached to a single post 50 miles later. The light bounces particularly well off of the bright white paint of those that appear to be newest. Others are dot- ted with spots of rust and gritty layers of dirt and grime—testaments to the long years they have spent silently guarding the sites they represent. Each post flags the site of a fatal motor vehicle crash. The number of crosses affixed to the post indicates the num- ber of lives lost in the collision. "They are not a memorial to someone who passed away," explains Lowell Long, commander of both the Amer- ican Legion Department of Montana and of the Montana American Legion Post #48 in Chinook. "The markers are a reminder to people to slow down and drive safely, because unfortunate- ly someone died in that spot." A VOLUNTEER EFFORT CARRIED ON THE BACKS OF TREASURE STATE VETERANS MONTANA AMERICAN LEGION'S HIGHWAY FATALITY MARKERS PROGRAM

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