Thomas L. Greenough Ledgers 1886-1901
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There are 6 Entities related to this resource.
Larson and Greenough
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6pq27wk (corporateBody)
Missoula Mercantile Company
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Andrew Hammond had arrived in Montana in 1867, settled in Hell Gate in 1870, then moved to Missoula in late 1871. He became a clerk in the store for Richard Eddy, and then a partner in the store in 1876. The business was renamed Eddy, Hammond, and Co. In 1877, the store constructed its building at the intersection of Front Street and Higgins Avenue, on the Mullan military road, in Missoula. In 1881, the firm was awarded the contract to clear the right of way and provide the lumber f...
Northern Pacific Railroad Company
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6dn7z44 (corporateBody)
These documents are duplicate copies from the papers of George A. Brackett, now part of the Northern Pacific Railroad collection at the Minnesota Historical Society. From the description of Papers. 1864-1914. (Tri-College Library). WorldCat record id: 18832082 Isaac "Ike" Gravelle was born in Canada in October 1871. He came to the United States in 1886. He was sent to the Montana State Prison in May 1891 on a conviction for horse stealing. After his release in 1893 he worked...
Greenough, Thomas L., 1851-1911
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tg2c63 (person)
Thomas Lockman Greenough was born in Davis County, Iowa, in 1851. He was one of fourteen children born to Christian Greenough and Martha J. Lockman. The family farmed and raised stock in Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. T.L. Greenough received his education in Kansas and Missouri where he learned stone masonry. After working on railroad masonry for a while, he became involved in mining interests in New Mexico and Colorado. He spent four years in the Black Hills of South Dakota where he m...
T. L. Greenough's Supply Store
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First National Bank of Missoula
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The First National Bank was organized in 1873 in Missoula, Mont., under the name Missoula National Bank. The bank was not only one of the first businesses in Missoula, but one of the first banks in Montana Territory. Bank officers included Christopher Higgins, Francis L. Worden, and J.P. Reinhard. Within a few months of its creation, the bank survived the Panic of 1873, which forced 172 banks across the U.S. to liquidate. During the last decades of the nineteenth century the Missoula bank played...