Los Angeles Times

Emerald state of mind

Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in the unlikelies­t home to many Irish descendant­s — Butte

- BY JOANNA POCOCK

>>> BUTTE, Mont. — If you’re stateside and feel like a cracking St. Patrick’s Day, you’ll want to be in America’s most Irish city. And that, surprising­ly, is Butte (per capita, anyway). ¶ This once-booming mining town with a population of about 35,000 is a hilly grid of streets straddling the Continenta­l Divide. Almost a quarter of Butte’s inhabitant­s are of Irish descent, compared with Boston’s one in f ive who can claim that heritage, according to the 2010 U.S. census.

¶ I discovered this Irish side of the American West during a midlife hankering for change when I upped sticks from London and moved to Missoula, Mont. ¶ I was prepared to fall in love with Montana’s sweeping landscapes and crystallin­e mountain light, but I was surprised that relocating there also meant getting in touch with my inner Celt. ¶ The Hibernian history of the state dates to the 19th century, when the Irish were escaping decades of famine. In 1862, with the discovery of gold, thousands of Irish immigrants headed to what is now Montana. ¶ Then, as if to give the area a Celtic seal of approval, Montana got its first acting governor in the form of fiery Irish nationalis­t Thomas Francis Meagher

(1823-1867).

You can see his fingerprin­ts all over the region in the bars, restaurant­s and counties bearing his name.

After reading about this Byronesque figure in Timothy Egan’s “The Immortal Irishman,” I was impelled to explore Montana’s hidden Irish side along with my own. And my journey started in Butte.

In the 1890s, prospector­s in Butte struck gold and silver, giving the town its nickname, “The Richest Hill on Earth.” But it was the plentiful veins of copper that really got the place booming.

This precious metal made the likes of Marcus Daly — another escapee from the Irish famines — one of the wealthiest men in the world.

When Butte’s mines were running at their peak between 1880 and 1920, more Gaelic was spoken below its streets than anywhere outside the Emerald Isle.

Party by the old mine

You can see the Irish influence all over town, from Cavanaugh’s County Celtic shop, which bursts with First Communion dresses, tweeds and Waterford crystal, to the city’s annual An Rí Rá festival. (“Rí rá” means “chaos” or “hullabaloo”’ in Gaelic.)

This festival (Aug. 11-13, www.mt gaelic.org) fills the sidewalks, bars and theaters with people from around the world who come for the Irish music, dancing and, of course, to sink a drink or two.

An Rí Rá may hold the honor of being the only festival in the U.S. (and probably anywhere for that matter) whose main stage is an old mine yard with its original head frame — one of those tall steel structures atop a mine shaft — now draped in fairy lights.

A visit to St. Patrick’s Cemetery in Butte also illustrate­s, although in a melancholy way, the town’s deep Irish roots. I found a headstone inscribed with my mother’s maiden name, which gave me the shivers. Montana was beginning to feel strangely familiar.

Butte’s 14 now-idle head frames and its almost 6,000 turn-of-thelast-century buildings make it among the largest — and perhaps least known — National Historic Landmark District in the U.S.

To get a sense of Butte’s wealthy heyday, have a wander through Daly’s 24,000-square-foot summer home three hours west in Hamilton, Mont. The mansion, built in 1889, has 50 rooms, seven fireplaces and lots of Italian marble.

Lavish grounds provide the backdrop for the annual Bitterroot Celtic Games & Gathering (Aug. 19 and 20, www.bcgg.org), where you can try Irish dancing, whiskey tasting, dog herding and, of course, Ireland’s national sport, the ancient game of hurling — a sort of cross between field hockey and soccer.

Action hero governor

But it was Meagher (pronounced MAHR) who planted the first green shoots of Irish-ness in Montana.

His life is the stuff of a Hollywood action film: privileged childhood in Waterford, Ireland; nationalis­t leader whom Queen Victoria sentenced to “hanging and quartering” in 1848; death sentence commuted; exile in Australia’s Tasmania; escape to New York (aided by pirates, no less) in 1852.

Once in the Big Apple, he married wealthy socialite Elizabeth (Libby) Townsend, whose parents disowned her for choosing a Catholic, adventure-seeking husband.

Meagher, restless in the city, enlisted in the Union Army and led Irish soldiers during the Civil War. His intense combat experience­s included the Battle of Antietam in Maryland, the bloodiest single-day fight on American soil.

After the war, Thomas and Libby settled in the territoria­l capital of Virginia City to assume his role as acting governor. In 1894, the town had more than 10,000 inhabitant­s, mostly gold miners. Today’s population of 190 gives Virginia City the feel of a living museum.

Walking tours take you past the Meaghers’ modest 500-square-foot log house, which Thomas and Libby comically called the “gubernator­ial mansion.” Today you can catch a vaudeville show at the Virginia City Opera House, ride a stagecoach, pan for gold and, in the Bale of Hay Saloon, take a ghost tour between sips of microbrew.

Perhaps because the couple’s life in Virginia City was harsh, Meagher wanted to show his wife the beauty of the territory — a beauty that has crept under my skin.

In the summer of 1866, he and Libby headed northwest to a tiny town whose name had just been changed from Hellgate Trading Post to Missoula. It is now a thriving city of 71,000, full of brewpubs, galleries, cafés, farmers markets, outdoor outfitters and, not to be overlooked, Guinness on tap at the Thomas Meagher Bar.

From Missoula, Thomas and Libby went north to the Jesuit Mission of St. Ignatius,where Mass is still celebrated every Sunday.

Brother Joseph Carignano (18531919), a self-taught artist and the mission’s cook and handyman, painted 58 scenes from the Old and New Testaments that still adorn the walls and ceiling of this pretty red brick church.

Two works by Montana artists Sam and Olive Wiprud painted in 1960 depict Christ as an Indian chief and Mary with a baby on a cradle board, reminding visitors that they are on the Flathead Indian Reservatio­n.

Overlookin­g the mission are the jagged, snow-capped Mission Mountains. It was during a hike in this range that Meagher apparently named a waterfall after his wife, although no one I know has found it.

Meagher’s last mission

Once resettled in Virginia City, Meagher was called away to Fort Benton, a ragged, dusty town on the Missouri River.

This outpost was one of the largest inland ports in the U.S., servicing paddle boats and steamboats that plied the river.

Fort Benton’s handsome threestory Grand Union Hotel, built in 1882, is Montana’s oldest continuous­ly running hotel and has been beautifull­y restored.

The old-world Union Grille Restaurant serves up-to-date meals with ingredient­s sourced from local farms, ranches and artisanal producers.

Unlike modern travelers who can enjoy the tranquilli­ty of Fort Benton and a cocktail on the Grand Union’s terrace, Meagher had a lessthan-relaxing experience.

He had been sent there by Gen. William T. Sherman to receive a shipment of firearms and ammunition for use against potential Indian uprisings. Meagher, having suffered at the hands of the British, equated the plight of the Native Americans with that of his beleaguere­d countrymen, and made this journey with a heavy heart.

On the night of July 1, 1867, the luck of this Irishman finally ran out. After accepting an invitation to dine on the riverboat G.A. Thompson with its captain, Meagher went overboard into the Missouri River.

A witness described hearing his “despairing cries for the help that could not be offered.” Meagher’s body was never found, and his death is still shrouded in mystery.

In 1905, a statue of Meagher on horseback, raising his sword in defiance, was erected in Helena, Montana’s new state capital. On July 1, this will be the setting for the first Meagherfes­t, where live music and drama will be performed to mark the 150th anniversar­y of his death.

In 2009, a bust of Meagher was placed on the banks of the Missouri in Fort Benton. He looks toward the town, away from his watery grave.

Meagher was not one to turn away from mystery or hardship. Knowing him as I do now from Egan’s biography, I’m guessing that he would prefer to be gazing at the Mighty Mo watching it flow high and fast with melting ice in spring, meandering lazily in summer’s heat, only to freeze and crack in winter. Who would want to turn away from the longest river in North America, as restless, changeable and elemental as the Immortal Irishman himself?

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? ROB SECCOMB, pipe major with the Anaconda AOH Pipes and Drum Corp, plays near a head frame in Butte. Like many here, he’s descended from Irish immigrants.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ROB SECCOMB, pipe major with the Anaconda AOH Pipes and Drum Corp, plays near a head frame in Butte. Like many here, he’s descended from Irish immigrants.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? THE SIGN begins to glow outside the Dublin as the sun sets on Montana Street in Butte, where Irish presence is felt all over town.
Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times THE SIGN begins to glow outside the Dublin as the sun sets on Montana Street in Butte, where Irish presence is felt all over town.
 ?? Lou Spirito Los Angeles Times ??
Lou Spirito Los Angeles Times
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A STATUE of Irish nationalis­t and Montanan Thomas Francis Meagher appears to lead a charge outside the Capitol in Helena.
A STATUE of Irish nationalis­t and Montanan Thomas Francis Meagher appears to lead a charge outside the Capitol in Helena.
 ??  ?? A HEAD FRAME is a reminder of what drew Irish workers to Butte: mining. That heritage is celebrated at the An Rí Rá fest.
A HEAD FRAME is a reminder of what drew Irish workers to Butte: mining. That heritage is celebrated at the An Rí Rá fest.

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