Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
May G. Flanagan Papers, 1887-1952
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Flanagan, May G., 1874-1958
- Title
- May G. Flanagan Papers
- Dates
- 1887-195218871952
- Quantity
- .4 linear feet
- Collection Number
- Collection 0381, MtBC, us (collection)
- Summary
- The Mary G. Flanagan Papers consist of photocopied manuscripts gathered into eleven topically labeled folders. The original typescripts in the collection were typed by, and some were edited by, Flanagan's niece, Virginia Flanagan (Mrs. John C) Harrison. Subjects include: correspondence with the Montana Historical Society regarding a project to mark the old Fort Benton to Helena stage road in 1952; essays and notes regarding Flanagan's childhood in Fort Benton, including traveling by stagecoach to Helena in 1886, education, frontier homes and life, and the residents of Fort Benton and Helena, including I.G. Baker. The collection also includes a transcribed diary by Virginia Flanagan regarding a trip through Yellowstone National Park with her sister May during the summer of 1903.
- Repository
-
Montana State University Library, Merrill G. Burlingame Special Collections
Montana State University-Bozeman Library
Merrill G Burlingame Special Collections
P.O. Box 173320
Bozeman, MT
59717-3320
Telephone: 4069944242
Fax: 4069942851
- Access Restrictions
-
This collection is open for research.
- Languages
- English
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
May G. Flanagan was born 15 July 1874 in Dubuque, Iowa, to Michael A. and Elizabeth Flanagan. The Flanagans were Fort Benton, Montana, pioneers, arriving in 1868. Since there was no doctor at the fort, her mother returned to Dubuque for May's birth. The Flanagans had three other children, Grace Flanagan Joyce, Virginia E. Flanagan, and Frank Flanagan. May's father worked for T.C. Power and Bro. as a bookkeeper when he first arrived in Fort Benton, and his sister Mary was married to Power. In 1875 Michael founded the first drug store in Fort Benton and later he also served as postmaster. May Flanagan graduated from the Wisconsin State Normal College in Milwaukee and then earned her A.B. degree at Montana State University in Missoula. She also did graduate work at Columbia University in New York City and at the University of California in Berkeley. Flanagan spent her life as an educator. She taught school in Fort Benton and Salt Lake City, served as Chouteau County superintendent of schools for two years, was the first principal of the Highwood High School, served as the Highwood superintendent of grade schools, and was the principal of the Whittier School in Great Falls from 1930 to 1944. She was an active member of the Montana Historical Society and wrote several historical articles that were printed in various publications. She died on 22 Sept. 1958 in Helena.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The photocopies in this collection were gathered into eleven topically labeled folders which were only partially calendared. Several of the essays in this collection were published in the Centennial Edition of the Fort Benton River Press on 21 August 1946, and in the booklet Old Fort Benton. The original typescripts in the collection were typed by, and some were edited by, Flanagan's niece, Virginia Flanagan (Mrs. John C) Harrison. Subjects include: correspondence with the Montana Historical Society regarding a project to mark the old Fort Benton to Helena stage road in 1952; essays and notes regarding Flanagan's childhood in Fort Benton, including traveling by stagecoach to Helena in 1886, education, frontier homes and life, and the residents of Fort Benton and Helena, including I.G. Baker. The collection also includes a transcribed diary by Virginia Flanagan regarding a trip through Yellowstone National Park with her sister May during the summer of 1903.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Acquisition Information
Original manuscripts collected or created by May G. Flanagan were loaned to the Montana State University Library for copying by Virginia Flanagan Harrison of Helena, Montana in 1965. After their copying, the materials were returned and most of them were subsequently donated to the Montana Historical Society and accessioned by them as SC 1236. This photocopied collection was also reported to the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections in 1979 and assigned by them entry number 79-656.
Processing Note
This collection was processed 2018 June 6
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
I. G. BakerReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/1
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
A perspective view of the life and times
of I.G. Baker (a company history), by May Flanagan
(Typescript and handwritten draft)
|
||
Letter to his daughter, by I.G.
Baker |
1887 | |
Notes about pictures not in the file by
Mary Baker Mitchell
(a daughter)
|
||
Letters from Frances Pollock
(daughter of I.G. Baker)
|
1951; 1952 | |
Letters from Anne McDonnell at the Montana
State Historical Society Library |
||
Manuscripts in the Missouri Historical
Society Collection about I.G. Baker |
||
Letter from G. Rider Davis of Macleod,
Alberta, about I.G. Baker at Fort Macleod |
1952 | |
Notes on I.G. Baker |
1819-1904 |
C. E. ConradReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/2
Container(s) | Description |
---|---|
Notes by May Flanagan
(Personal recollections)
|
|
Conrad Family |
Major Alexander CulbertsonReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/3
Container(s) | Description |
---|---|
Remarks about fur traders who ran the
Fort |
Fort BentonReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/4
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Articles from the River Press, by May and Virginia Flanagan |
August 21, 1946 | |
"A frontier home," by May
Flanagan
(a child's memories of the old Fort and life in the commandant's
house)
|
||
A continuation describing her home on
Baker Street the town, the Conrad family, and Colonel Moale |
||
"Old Fort Benton," by May G.
Flanagan
(a portion was published in a pamphlet by this name)
|
||
Fort Benton street plan
(fragment)
|
in the 1870s | |
Article copied from Fort Benton Record
|
January 1, 1883 | |
Speech to the Pioneer Convention in Fort
Benton |
1946 | |
Reminiscences of her personal life as a
young girl |
||
Fort Benton-introduction |
||
The river during freighting
days |
||
Effects on mining |
1862-1875 | |
Indians |
||
Early Indian trade |
Fort BentonReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/5
James H. Fullwood letters, 1935-1936Return to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/6
Stage routes and trailsReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/7
SchoolsReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/8
Steamboat voyages and stagecoach travelReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/9
Thomas C. Power familyReturn to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/10
Yellowstone National Park journey, 1903Return to Top
Container(s): Box-folder 1/11