Butte began as a gold and silver boomtown in the 1860s, but it would be copper that would earn it the designation “The Richest Hill on Earth”. The townsite rests atop one of the most extensive and valuable copper deposits ever found, and when electricity was becoming more widespread around the country, Butte was supplying the copper for the wiring. There’s a very good chance that my family’s home, all the way across the country in Washington D.C., was wired using Butte copper. The city would grow as the mines expanded, with some reaching over a mile down into the earth. Miners would flock from all over the world to work those mines, creating one of the most diverse cities in the west during its heyday. Along with the miners came thousands of other people to run and work in the shops, saloons, restaurants and brothels that grew up alongside the mines. The population would grow to at least 60,000 by the 1920s, making it the biggest city between Chicago and San Francisco. As the mining process became more mechanized, Butte’s population would begin to decline and Butte today is home to only about 35,000 people.

Butte is a wonderful, old city with a ton of history and a million reminders of the city it once was. It’s one of the most photogenic cities I’ve ever been to and one I always look forward to returning to. I love Casagranda’s for an old-school steakhouse experience, Maloney’s is a classic bar and John’s pork chop sandwiches are always a treat. I hope you enjoy these photos from beautiful Butte, Montana - The Richest Hill on Earth.

The Orphan Girl Mine Headframe

At the World Museum of Mining

The World Museum of Mining

Overland Rye!

You Know I Can’t Resist a Post Clock

Butte Beer at Scandia Hall

Copper King Saloon in the Old Milwaukee Tavern

Maloney’s is a Classic

Mai Wah Museum of Butte’s Chinese Heritage

The Covellite Theatre

The M&M is a Butte Institution

The Beautiful Clark Chateau

Classic Old Buildings and Signage

Uptown Butte

Casagranda’s is a Great Steak House and I Love the Highlander Beer Sign

Piccadilly Museum of Transportation & Advertising Art

I Love the Neon at the Tait Hotel

The Old Milwaukee Road Station

A Great Ghost Sign for Highlander Beer

Butte’s Mine Headframes are Awesome

Inside the Clark Chateau

Bronx Lounge and Leggat Hotel Signs

Bnai Israel Synagogue

The Carpenters’ Union

The Old Curtis Music Hall

The Copper King’s Mansion

The Grand Hotel

Hotel Finlen

Knights of Columbus

A Lit Headframe with Our Lady of the Rockies on the Hill

Headframe Downtown Décor

Cool Old Buildings and Ghost Signs

Hotel Finlen

IOOF Lodge

The Old Irish Times

A Beautiful Old Victorian

The Bulldogs’ Field

Uptown Butte

Classic Creamery Cafe Ghost Sign

Beautiful Ghost Signs

The Tait

The Old Metals Bank and Trust Building

Beautiful Ghost Signs

Metals Bar

Lit Up Antiques Store

Heidelberg Beer Sign

A Miner Leprechaun

The Mother Lode Theatre

A Classic Entryway

Pekin Noodle House

Picadilly Transportation Museum

Patriotic Window for the 4th

So Many Churches

The Covellight Theatre

City Hall

Beautiful Old House

Old Silver Dollar Cafe

Classic Sgnage

Gorgeous Old House

Cool Hidden Ghost Sign

The Cowboy

Uptown Buildings

Butte Water Company

The Scott

Gorgeous Old Buildings

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