Wood, James David, 1841-1909

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Stanley Roland Davison was born May 6, 1911, in East Helena, Montana. He received a doctorate from the University of California and served in the Navy during World War II and Korea. Davison spent most of his academic career at Western Montana College in Dillon, Montana where he worked for thirty years. He wrote a number of articles on Montana history and received an award from the Daughters of the American Revolution for his contributions to Montana history, research, and study. He died on May 14, 1986.

James David Wood was born in 1841 at Mercer County, Missouri. In 1864 he traveled from Atchison, Kansas to Virginia City with a freight outfit, working his way as a mule herder. Once in Montana Territory, Wood tried his hand at mining and other jobs, eventually moving to Idaho to again engage in mining in the Leesburg area. During the Nez Perce war he was one of the first on the scene of the "Birch Creek Massacre," a freighting team that was killed by the Nez Perce in present day Clark County, Idaho. During the Bannock War of 1878 he was a participant in a fight involving a freight wagon team in the Lost River valley where a comrade, Jesse McCaleb, was killed. Wood became a successful businessman in Salt Lake City towards the end of his life, owning mining interests in Utah, Nevada, and Idaho, along with a mercantile operation in Salt Lake City itself. He died on January 17, 1909.

From the guide to the Autobiography of James David Wood, circa 1964, (Montana State University-Bozeman Library, Merrill G Burlingame Special Collections)

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Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Autobiography of James David Wood, circa 1964 MSU-Bozeman Library, Merrill G Burlingame Special Collections
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associatedWith Davison, Stanley Roland person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Idaho-History-19th century
Virginia City (Mont.)-History
Montana-History-19th century
Subject
Bannock Indians
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Activity

Person

Birth 1841

Death 1909-01-17

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