Janet "Jann" McCollough - Anaconda, MT
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 46° 08.049 W 112° 57.942
12T E 348160 N 5110830
This old log cabin was built in about 1865 by Alexander Glover, the first settler in the area, and was the first structure built in the Anaconda area. Amazingly, it survives to this day.
Waymark Code: WMKM55
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 04/30/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 1

Set in the header above the door is a plaque, placed in memory of Janet "Jann" McCollough, AKA "The Flower Lady". Janet was born December 1st, 1950 and passed away on October 31st, 1998 at the young age of 47. Nothing more could be found about Jann, but she must have made an impact during her time on earth for this plaque to have been placed in this location.

The cabin was moved from its original location in 1916 to its present location in Washoe Park, on the western edge of Anaconda. Still in reasonable condition, it was used as park headquarters for many years, but today has been retired to the status of grand old heritage building. In the summer months it is open as a museum.
Alexander Glover, a native of Scotland, came to ranch in the Deer Lodge Valley in 1865. The first to settle in the Warm Springs Creek drainage, he built this cabin of saddle- notched hewn logs. On April 12, 1868, Glover, at thirty, married twenty-year-old Mary James. Mary’s father, William M. James, had come with his family from Wales to the Deer Lodge Valley where he established one of the early ranches. The marriage of Alexander and Mary was the first at Warm Springs Creek. The Glovers’ son Thomas, eldest of their seven children, was born on March 14, 1870, reputedly the first white child born at the creek.

The Glovers ranched and farmed until 1883 when Marcus Daly commissioned local rancher Morgan Evans to purchase lands for a townsite and smelter. The Glover family sold the ranch, Alexander eventually turned to mining, and the family cabin became headquarters for the Anaconda townsite surveying crew. The quaint little cabin remained on its original site near Elm Street for another thirty years. In 1916, annexation of the First Western Addition, which included most of the original Glover ranch, prompted removal of the cabin to Washoe Park about a mile away. Here in its new setting, the historic cabin long served as park headquarters. Today the Glover Cabin, unique to the area for its single-pen linear form, is Anaconda’s oldest surviving building and a tribute to the first settlers at Warm Springs Creek.
From the NRHP Plaque
Location: Glover Cabin - Washoe Park

Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: Not listed

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