Distinctly Montana Magazine
Issue link: https://digital.distinctlymontana.com/i/425666
d i s t i n c t ly m o n ta n a • w i n t e r 2 0 1 5 74 D uring the Great Depression, famed correspondent Ernie Pyle toured the United States and wrote about his travels in a weekly column for the Scripps-Howard newspaper chain. He visited Mon- tana in 1936 and became a big fan of the state's transportation landscape, writing, "Every so often along the highways … you'll see a neat little sign: 'Historical Point – 1000 feet.' You coast along and pull over to a wide graveled area, and there is a hand- some signboard consisting of two logs set upright in the ground, with a third laid across the top, from which hangs a neat wooden placard about six feet square. On this board the historical message is painted in black letters a couple of inches high. The message is not only easy to read; it says something…." Like thousands of other Americans, Pyle was a devotee of the signs written by Mon- tana Highway Department engineer Robert H. Fletcher. The roadside historical mark- ers were just one facet of Fletcher's campaign designed to draw tourists to Montana, but they ended up being the most recognized and praised by the public. Rosebud I 94, MP 112, hathaway rESt arEa From July 28, 1806, when Wm. Clark passed Rosebud Creek on his way down the Yellowstone, this river valley has served as one of the major avenues for development and trade in eastern Montana. Innumerable trappers and traders followed Clark's route, including the American Fur Co. which constructed Ft. Van Buren at the junc- ture of the Rosebud and Yellowstone in 1835. The fort proved unprofitable and was abandoned in 1843. Buffalo hunters took over 40,000 robes from this area alone during the 1860s and 1870s, shipping them out by river boat. The slaughter disrupted eastern Montana's Indian culture and precipitated several years of bloody confrontation culminating in the Battle of the Rosebud on June 17, 1876, and the Battle of the Little Big Horn eight days later. In late 1882, the Northern Pacific R.R. established a siding in the Rosebud vicin- ity as it pushed westward. Soon a town sprang up as a livestock shipping center with Butte Creek and the Rosebud forming a natural corral. Rail and auto transportation quickly replaced wagon and river traffic. As Rosebud grew it even acquired its own car dealership, the Otis Davis Agency featuring the E.M.F. line. Many an old timer as- sumed the initials meant "Every Morning Fix 'em." history through the Windshield Montana's highway markers DEpartmENt hErItagE hErItagE hErItagE