Distinctly Montana Magazine

2024 // Summer

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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77 w w w. d i s t i n c t l y m o n t a n a . c o m near Helena. The monument was built to honor Roosevelt and to memorialize the completion of his namesake highway. Con- gress appropriated $25,000 for the monument, and construction was completed in 1931. The monument was built at Marias Pass. With an elevation of 5,213 feet, it became the northernmost mountain pass open to automobile traffic in the United States year-round, without which the Roosevelt Highway could not have been completed. Today, U.S. Route 2 uses the pass, along with the BNSF Rail- way, a successor to the Great Northern Railway. The railroad route, which sees much freight traffic, is also used by Amtrak's Empire Builder. It is part of BNSF's Northern Transcon line link- ing Chicago and the Pacific Northwest. A statue of John F. Ste- vens, the engineer who discovered Marias Pass while working for the Great Northern Railway, stands at the summit. When the ribbon was cut on the Roosevelt Memorial Obe- lisk and the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway was opened, the highway traversed two countries, 12 states, three provinces, five great lakes, two oceans, 86 counties, 64 county seats and a population of more than 4.2 million people. The impact of the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway was immediately felt. Not only did it connect communities and cultures across vast stretches of land, it heralded a new era of regional and national transportation, facilitating the movement An authentic French bakery bringing ingredients, recipes, and savoir-faire directly from Paris to Bozeman. AuroreBakery.com (406) 581-1092 141 West Baxter Lane, Unit 13 Bozeman The Marias Pass monument

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