134 West Broadway - Butte, MT
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 46° 00.802 W 112° 32.350
12T E 380847 N 5096684
In downtown Butte, 134 West Broadway is one of the many buildings which bear a contributing building plaque. Though almost all buildings in downtown Butte are contributing, not all have plaques mounted.
Waymark Code: WMW3GT
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 07/05/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ZenPanda
Views: 0

This Historic District, listed in 1961 only in Butte, was expanded in 2006 to include Walkerville and Anaconda. This made it the largest Historic District in the country in terms of number of contributing properties, which totals 6,013.

In the Historic District are 5975 contributing buildings, 37 contributing structures and 1 contributing object. The district encompasses 27,200 acres, or 42.5 square miles. As the largest Historic District in terms of number of contributing properties, it has also been designated a National Historic Landmark. The whole shebang was the result of a couple of hills in the area containing vast amounts of copper ore and lesser amounts of other metals, such as gold and silver.
134 West Broadway

A private ground-floor residence with rooms for rent upstairs was the original function of this 1880s two-story building. Its history provides a fascinating glimpse of life in early-day Butte. Maps of 1888 and 1890 show that a frame open-air porch spanned the building's length at the rear. An unusual walkway connected the porch to a small two-story building, undoubtedly the common privy. The dwelling was home to English miner Joseph Brook whose wife, Clara, ran the rooming house at the turn of the century. By 1910, seven lodgers rented furnished rooms from Mrs. Josie Meyer who lived here with her husband, two small children and her mother. Two decades later, the first-floor residence had been divided into two storefronts housing a millinery shop and a corner grocery. Furnished rooms were still available upstairs at least through the 1930s. Although the original brick veneer was replaced circa 1915-1920, the upstairs central entry remains from the 1880s rooming house.
From the plaque at the building
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The sign describes the building, to which it is affixed.


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