Park County

Park County, Montana, United States
category: boundary — type: administrative — OSM: relation 1242989

Items with no match found in OSM

173 items

Anzick Clovis Burial (Q19864463)
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Anzick site (24PA506), located adjacent to Flathead Creek, a tributary of the Shields River in Wilsall, Park County, Montana, United States, is the only known Clovis burial site in the New World. The term "Clovis" is used by archaeologists to define one of the New World's earliest hunter-gatherer cultures and is named after the site near Clovis, New Mexico, where human artifacts were found associated with the procurement and processing of mammoth and other large and small fauna.

Wilmont Theatre (Q42903294)
item type: movie theater

Street address: N. Elliot Street, Wilsall, MT 59086 (from Wikidata)

Fort Parker (Q5471786)
item type: fort
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Fort Laramie Indian Treaty of 1868, which closed travel on the Bozeman Trail and the Yellowstone Valley, stipulated that the re-defined Crow Reserve would have a new "centerpoint" or agency for the Crow. The first Crow Agency, which was supposed to be built where Big Timber is today, was eventually located about eight miles east of present-day Livingston in the year 1869.

USGS GNIS ID: 1743312

Wineglass (Q6167974)
item type: census-designated place in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Wineglass is a census-designated place in Park County, Montana, United States. Its population was 256 as of the 2010 census.

USGS GNIS ID: 2583868

Campione (Q123027068)
item type: restaurant
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Campione is an Italian restaurant in Livingston, Montana. Established in August 2020, the business was included in The New York Times's 2023 list of the 50 best restaurants in the United States.

B Street District (Q38251506)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

B Street District is a 0.5 acres (0.20 ha) historic district in Livingston, Montana which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Street address: B Street (from Wikidata)

NRHP reference number: 79001408

Rolfson House (Q38251502)
item type: house
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Rolfson House near Livingston, Montana was built in 1900. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Street address: Bozeman Road (from Wikidata)

NRHP reference number: 79001418

Trowbridge Dairy (Q38251493)
item type: farm
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Trowbridge Dairy is a property with four buildings which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Street address: 207 South M Street (from Wikidata)

NRHP reference number: 79001419

Oliver and Lucy Bonnell Gothic Arch Roofed Barn (Q54874296)
item type: barn
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Oliver and Lucy Bonnell Gothic Arch Roofed Barn in Park County, Montana, or simply the Bonnell Barn, is a Gothic-arch barn which was built in 1922. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

NRHP reference number: 04000978

Park Theatre (Q42903104)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 117 N. Main Street, Livingston, MT 59047 (from Wikidata)

Strand Theatre (Q42903108)
item type: movie theater / destroyed building or structure

Street address: 110 S. 2nd Street, Livingston, MT 59047 (from Wikidata)

Livingston-park County Public Library (Q69513738)
item type: public library / main library

Street address: 228 West Callender Street, Livingston, MT 59047 (from Wikidata)

Chico Hot Springs (Q5096430)
item type: unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Chico Hot Springs are located near Pray, Montana. It is approximately 30 miles north of Yellowstone National Park. Beginning in 1900, the natural hot springs has been gradually turned into a vacation resort.

USGS GNIS ID: 781216

DePuy Spring Creek (Q5244047)
item type: tributary
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

DePuy Spring Creek is a three mile long trout fishery located between the Absaroka and Gallatin mountain ranges in Paradise Valley, south of Livingston, Montana. The creek is a small tributary of the Yellowstone River. This fishery supports a population of brown, Yellowstone cutthroat and rainbow trout.

Pray (Q6084083)
item type: census-designated place in the United States / unincorporated community in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Pray is a census-designated place and unincorporated community in Park County, Montana, United States, in the Paradise Valley. The town was founded in 1907 by Valentine Eggar, an entrepreneur. He named it after Congressman Charles Nelson Pray. Its population was 681 as of the 2010 census. Pray has a post office with ZIP code 59065, which opened on December 8, 1909.

USGS GNIS ID: 2583836, 789175; website: http://www.praymontana.net/

Pine Creek (Q107366065)
item type: census-designated place in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Pine Creek is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Park County, Montana, United States. It is in the central part of the county, on the east side of the Paradise Valley, where Pine Creek joins the Yellowstone River.

USGS GNIS ID: 2804312, 788874

South Glastonbury (Q6132768)
item type: census-designated place in the United States
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

South Glastonbury is a census-designated place in Park County, Montana, United States. Its population was 284 as of the 2010 census.

USGS GNIS ID: 2583812, 2652371

Paradise Valley (Q7134388)
item type: valley
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Paradise Valley is a major river valley of the Yellowstone River in Southwestern Montana just north of Yellowstone National Park in Park County. The valley is flanked by the Absaroka Range on the east and the Gallatin Range on the west.

USGS GNIS ID: 788626

Beartooth Mountains (Q1145853)
item type: mountain range
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Beartooth Mountains are located in south central Montana and northwest Wyoming, U.S. and are part of the 944,000 acres (382,000 ha) Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness, within Custer, Gallatin and Shoshone National Forests. The Beartooths are the location of Granite Peak, which at 12,807 feet (3,904 m) is the highest point in the state of Montana. The mountains are just northeast of Yellowstone National Park and are part of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. The mountains are traversed by road via the Beartooth Highway (U.S. 212) with the highest elevation at Beartooth Pass 10,947 ft (3,337 m)). The name of the mountain range has been attributed by the U.S. Forest Service to a rugged peak found in the range, Beartooth Peak, that has the appearance of a bear's tooth. Originally, the Beartooth Mountains were named after Beartooth Butte, a large block of paleozoic sedimentary rock on the Beartooth Plateau, and Beartooth Butte was named for a tooth-like structure that projects from the front of the butte.

USGS GNIS ID: 779574

North Entrance Road Historic District (Q2000635)
item type: road / historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The North Entrance Road Historic District is a historic district and road in Yellowstone National Park in Park County, Wyoming, and Park County, Montana in the United States, that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).

NRHP reference number: 02000529, 02000530

Gardiner High School (Q5522527)
item type: high school
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Gardiner High School is a public high school in Gardiner, Montana, United States. It is part of the Gardiner Public Schools district.

website: http://www.gardiner.org; USGS GNIS ID: 1743284

U.S. Route 89 in Montana (Q63071738)
item type: road
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

U.S. Highway 89 (US 89) is a north-south United States Numbered Highway in the state of Montana. It extends approximately 400.5 miles (644.5 km) from Yellowstone National Park north to the Canadian border. US 89 is an important tourist route within Montana as it connects Yellowstone National Park and Glacier National Park. The section of US 89 located between US 12 and US 87 is known as the Kings Hill Scenic Byway, which passes through the Little Belt Mountains in the Lewis and Clark National Forest, and is home to a wide variety of wildlife and provides many recreational opportunities for travelers along the route.

Gardiner station (Q96379095)
item type: former railway station
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Gardiner station was a railway station in Gardiner, Montana, serving the Northern Pacific Railway. Gardiner was on the southern terminus of a branch line from Livingston and is at the northern border of Yellowstone National Park. Passengers would be shuttled to/from the park via stagecoach. The station was designed by Robert Reamer in the rustic style. Passenger service eventually diminished from Gardiner, and the station was torn down in 1954.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: Buildings and structures demolished in 1954, Demolished buildings and structures in Montana, Railway stations in the United States closed in 1954
Mountain Rose Theater (Q42902917)
item type: movie theater

Street address: 210 Stone Road, Gardiner, MT 59030 (from Wikidata)

State Theatre (Q42902921)
item type: movie theater / destroyed building or structure

Street address: 208 Park Street, Gardiner, MT 59030 (from Wikidata)

Gallatin Range (Q1027662)
item type: mountain range
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The Gallatin Range is a mountain range of the Rocky Mountains, located in the U.S. states of Montana and Wyoming. It includes more than 10 mountains over 10,000 feet (3,000 m). The highest peak in the range is Electric Peak at 10,969 feet (3,343 m).

USGS GNIS ID: 800821, 1609338

OTO Homestead and Dude Ranch (Q7073100)
item type: historic district
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

The OTO Homestead and Dude Ranch was the first dude ranch in the US state of Montana. It was started by James Norris (Dick) Randall and his wife Dora after they purchased squatters rights on a small cabin along Cedar Creek in the Absaroka Range. The original cabin had a dirt floor cabin with a sod roof. Randall courted wealthy eastern clients (the Dudes) and by 1912 they came to the OTO to experience a "genuine" western ranch lifestyle. The property grew to meet the needs of guests and by the 1920s included an impressive lodge (1921), cabins, barns, post office, and outbuildings. Notable guests included Theodore Roosevelt and Marcellus Hartley Dodge, Jr.

NRHP reference number: 99000054

Beartooth National Forest (Q4876799)
item type: United States National Forest
Summary from English Wikipedia (enwiki)

Beartooth National Forest was established in Montana on July 1, 1908 by the U.S. Forest Service with 685,293 acres (2,773.28 km2) from part of Yellowstone National Forest and all of Pryor Mountains National Forest. On February 17, 1932 the forest was divided between Absaroka National Forest and Custer National Forest and the name preserved as the Beartooth Ranger District of Custer National Forest.

This item might be defunct. The English Wikipedia article is in these categories: 1932 disestablishments in Montana, Former national forests of Montana