By Richard I. Gibson
H.O. Christenson, the invitee, was a clerk; George Holbrook was a carpenter. William E. Hall was superintendent of the Alice Mine, and Frank Kramlick was proprietor of the American House hotel on the north side of West Daly Street in Walkerville (the labeled building on the Bird’s-Eye view is probably the American House, but not for certain).
George Hillebrand was foreman at the Lexington Stamp Mill (the “new” mill in Walkerville, not the old one that stood at present-day Lexington Gardens, Broadway at Wyoming Street) and Carroll, Reimel, and Coppedge were mill workers there. The mill was connected to the Lexington Mine on Main Street by a series of trestles.
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Walkerville and the Lexington Mine and Mill (click to enlarge) |
Fisher was an amalgamator at the Alice. He would have worked the machines that combined mercury with gold to free it from the rock. N.C. Anderson was a miner and Charles Bruhn was a butcher, the Butte partner of Nick Bielenberg in a meat market.
All the members of the party committee lived in Walkerville at a time when there were no street addresses, though most of the streets were probably there and named. They all lived on Daly or Main St except for Anderson, who lived on Dunn.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcLvFulFoxfZW-19vogPJp5wmiEbw9Rs_r4onP_g5d4fymmMTNjrPvGd-XcxGfkitPRMiE20ZF0cRjnxY8g0EXHK_NoRBmytA0oIUxJy8qbVKqIeTPRGSEpJtxzqIsEyC0UYjumHMaWbJ6/s280/Walkerville+MT+1885+Cover+Invitation+to+AOUW+Ball.jpg)
The Walkerville Hibernia (AOH) hall where the ball took place stood on Main Street just south of the intersection with Daly.
Invitation and envelope from Steve Henderson’s collection (scanned by him). The postmark appears to be 1889, but it is a smudged 1885. It would not have been a "Montana Terr." postmark in Dec. 1889, since Montana was a state at that time. Bird’s-Eye view, 1884, from Library of Congress, annotated by Gibson.
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