Troy, Montana
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 48° 27.786 W 115° 53.452
11U E 581992 N 5368368
Built on mining and the Great Northern Railroad, Troy is the northwestern gateway city into Montana.
Waymark Code: WMV6VW
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 03/05/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 1

Some time after Theodore Roosevelt's presidency ended in 1909, he visited Troy and placed his initials on the outer wall of what is now city hall. The initials have been lovingly cared for and are still there on the front wall under the "City of Troy" sign.

Built of brick with corbelling at the cornice, the two storey building has a stepped parapet which reduces the building to a single storey toward the east end. The building is shared with the Troy police department. Though we don't know when city hall was built, it shares many features with the Troy Jail, an NRHP building constructed in 1924.

There is some disagreement over how Troy got its name. Some say it took its name for a civil engineer working for the Great Northern. Others think the town was named for the Troy weight system, which was used to weigh silver and gold. Still others say that E.L. Preston named the town for Troy Morrow, the son of a family that was providing him with room and board while he surveyed the area for track and laid out the town site. It is this latter theory that is most accepted.
From the City of Troy

The city of Troy has experienced several booms and busts, beginning with the discovery of gold nearby in 1886, followed by the arrival of the Great Northern Railroad in 1892. Following is a short timeline of the history of Troy.

1886 First miners arrive and set up a tent camp
1889 Prospecting begins in the Callahan Creek drainage, south of Troy
    November 8: Montana Becomes the 41st State
1891 The Great Northern Railroad establishes its camp nearby
1892 Troy’s first lodging house, the Windsor Hotel, built
    June: The town of Troy, Missoula County, filed
    First house built in Troy by J.P. Bowen, postmaster of Libby
    September: Great Northern decides in favour of Troy for division yard
    Roundhouse, coal chute, ice house, depot, sand house, railroad yard built
1893 Tom Dobson moves his store and Post Office into Troy
1894 The Troy Mining and Improvement Company organized
1895 Gold discovered in the Yaak River Valley starting a stampede to Yahk
    July 21: Work began on the Troy Ferry across the Kootenai River
1907 The new Windsor Hotel completed
1910 The Great Forest Fires of 1910 spare the town
1912 Highway 2 proposed
    First caravan of tourists arrive by automobile
    Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Bridge built across Kootenai River
1915 Troy’s first auto garage, City Garage, built
    March 12: Troy Volunteer Fire Department established
    July: Town of Troy incorporated
    Population 350 - Highway 2 (Teddy Roosevelt Highway) completed
1918 September, October: Spanish influenza makes its way into Troy
1921 Town of Troy growing faster than crews could build
1922 Sandpoint Lumber & Pole Company builds large sawmill and planer nearby
1923 Troy now the richest town in Lincoln County. Population: 1200 plus
1924 November 13: Lincoln Theatre Opens (it remains open today)
1926 April: Great Northern Railway discontinues the round house
    December: Great Northern closes down the Troy Division Yard
1927 Fire destroys concentrator at the Snow Storm Silver-Lead Mine
    Snow Storm Silver-Lead Mining Company closes the mine
1928 Fire destroys the Sandpoint Pole and Lumber Company sawmill
1929 Great depression ends any chance of rebuilding the concentrator and sawmill
1930 Population of Troy down to 498
1931 February 6: Talking movies at the Lincoln Theatre
1941 August 6: Fire destroys the Great Northern Hotel
1994 Lincoln Theatre remodeled. Seating capacity now 170

As the writers of the American Guide Series book, Montana, A State Guide Book passed through they created a small entry in the book for Troy, as follows. Troy was still a Great Northern freight division point in 1939, but the roundhouse and workshops were gone, or at least closed, by that time.
TROY, 213.2 m. (1,892 alt., 498 pop.), is on the dividing line between Mountain and Pacific Standard time (west-bound travelers set watches back 1 hour). Troy is a freight division point on the Great Northern Ry., and headquarters of silver mining outfits working in the Cabinet Mountains.
From Montana, A State Guide Book
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City Hall
Lincoln Theatre
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Public Library
Troy Jail
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Fire Hall
Teddy Roosevelt Bridge
Book: Montana

Page Number(s) of Excerpt: 246

Year Originally Published: 1939

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