U.S. state flag consisting of a dark blue field (background) with the name of the state in yellow above the state seal. In 1865 the provisional legislature adopted a seal for public business, and that same design is used by the state today. It includes a representation of the Rocky Mountains, which are fundamental to the state's topography and to its name, a derivation of the Latin montana (mountainous). The seal also depicts a river and forests, recalling Montana's vast stretches of natural beauty and its wealth in forestry and agriculture. Central to the design is Great Falls, a distinctive landmark that has become a tourist attraction. The plow and crossed pick and shovel symbolize agriculture and the mining industry; the latter is also referred to in the state motto, Oro y plata (Gold and silver), which appears on a ribbon in the seal. The state flag was based on the flag of the First Montana infantry regiment in the Spanish-American War (1898); the original design was dark blue with the state seal (minus its encircling inscription) in the centre. The infantry flag had lost its fringe at the fly end, so the law specified that the official state flag should be decorated with fringe at the top and bottom edges only. The flag was adopted in 1905, but many other states adopted similar designs, and the flag became less easily distinguishable. In 1981 the legislature modified the design by adding the word Montana above the seal. Whitney Smith History At the beginning of the 19th century the Crow Indians occupied the south central portion of present-day Montana, the Cheyenne the southeastern corner, the Assiniboin and Atsina the northeastern corner, the Blackfoot the central and north central area, and the Kutenai the northwestern corner. The Pend d'Oreille had a territory around Flathead Lake, the Kalispel were in the mountains west of there, and the Flathead occupied the Clark Fork and Bitterroot valleys. The southwestern corner was disputed territory. The Flathead were later forcibly moved to their present reservation in the Flathead valley. Most of the other tribes are now living on reservations within their respective territories. The first white explorers known to have set foot in Montana were the members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (180406). Fur trappers and traders followed, setting up forts to trade with the Indians. The only early trading post to survive as a present-day town was Fort Benton, which was established in 1846 and became an important port on the Missouri River. Roman Catholic missionaries followed the fur traders and in 1841 established Saint Mary's Mission near present-day Stevensville, believed to be the first permanent settlement in Montana. Trailblazers carved the northern Overland Route to Montana from the east, the Bozeman Trail from the southeast, and Mullan Road westward from Fort Benton, the head of navigation for steamboats on the Missouri. Gold prospectors flocked in after rich placer deposits were discovered in the early 1860s. Montana Territory was established in 1864 with Bannack, in Grasshopper Creek, its first capital, and Virginia City, in Alder Gulch, its second. As pressure from white settlers increased, the Indians fought to protect their hunting grounds. The Dakota (Sioux) and Cheyenne won their last major victory in June 1876 at the Battle of the Little Bighorn. A band of Nez Perc under Chief Joseph won a battle in the Big Hole Basin the following year and fled toward Canada, only to be met and defeated by U.S. troops a few miles south of the international boundary. Hard-rock mining began in the 1880s, and Montana became a state on Nov. 8, 1889, with Helena as the capital. Butte began as a gold camp, but shaft mining commenced when vast deposits of copper were discovered there. Butte subsequently became known as the Richest Hill on Earth, and the world's largest smelter was built at nearby Anaconda. The so-called War of the Copper Kings was won by Marcus Daly, whose Anaconda Company became one of the largest mining conglomerates in the world. The company smashed the mining unions, influenced the state legislature, acquired almost all of Montana's daily newspapers, and virtually controlled the state for three-quarters of a century. Cattle and sheep grazing in Great Plains Montana started in the 1860s, when herds were driven overland from Texas. The vast grasslands seemed ideal for cattle, but a severe winter in 188687 virtually wiped out the herds. Beginning around 1900, homesteaders began pouring into the plains country to bust the sod and grow grain on dry land. After a few years of bumper crops and high prices, a series of dry years brought financial disaster and mass exodus. Oil and natural gas production began in Great Plains Montana in 1915, expanded greatly in the 1950s, and peaked in the 1960s. Coal mining, which began in the days of coal stoves and steam locomotives, increased dramatically in the 1970s. The closing of the copper mines at Butte, the smelter in Anaconda, and the copper refinery at Great Falls in the early 1980s marked the end of the copper century and a turning point in Montana's history. The state no longer relies so heavily on the primary economic sector; more emphasis is placed on tourism and on new and innovative businesses that provide jobs without causing deterioration of the state's magnificent mountains, crystal waters, and wide-open spaces. Dorothy M. Johnson John M. Crowley
MONTANA, FLAG OF
Meaning of MONTANA, FLAG OF in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012