The University of Montana
 
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Montana at a Glance
Population in 2000
902,195

Population per square mile
6.2

Largest city
Billings (population 89,847)

Land Area
145,552 sq. miles

Smallest city
Ismay (population 26)

Counties
56

Highest point
Granite Peak, 12,799 feet above sea level

Downhill ski areas
15

Annual visitor count for Glacier National Park
1,864,822

Annual visitor count for Yellowstone National Park
2,969,868

A Brief Timeline

1805 Lewis and Clark crossed the Rocky Mountains in Montana

1864 Montana Territory established

1872 Yellowstone National Park founded

1889 Montana achieves statehood

1893 Legislature established the Montana university system

1897 Bitterroot National Forest established—first in state, one of first in nation

1914 Montana grants women suffrage

 

Visit the UM postcard gallery
Barn and autumn colors on the Metcalf National Wildlife Refuge south of Missoula.

“I’m in love with Montana. For other states I have admiration, respect, recognition, even some affection. But with Montana it is love. And it’s difficult to analyze love when you’re in it ...”
–John Steinbeck, Travels with Charley

The Last Best Place. Big Sky Country. The Treasure State.

Montana is celebrated for many things, among them its grand mountains, vast prairies, wide-open sky, cool clear rivers, abundant wildlife and friendly, independent people. The fourth-largest state in the nation, Montana has a population of just more than 900,000, for an average of only 6.2 people per square mile. There are three cows for every person.

American Indians were the first inhabitants of the land we now call Montana, and comprise about 6 percent of the state’s current population. The Lewis and Clark Expedition spent more time in Montana than in any other state during its historic 1803-1806 journey. Montana became a state in 1889, uniting the Rocky Mountains on the western side of the Continental Divide with the heartland prairies on the eastern side.

With an economy once based largely on agriculture, timber and mining, the state’s industries are becoming more diversified. Tourism in particular is on the rise as people discover Montana’s incredible natural beauty, rich culture and excellent recreational opportunities.

Montana. There’s something special about this place.

 

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