Most everyone has a hometown. Mine is Deer Lodge, Montana, still fresh in my mind

Photo shows Deer Lodge, Montana

Deer Lodge once was a two-stoplight town. It’s a quieter, less-populated place now. The town lost 1,000 residents after the railroad pulled out. This view looks south toward the old prison, towers visible in the distance.

By Kevin S. Giles

I have memories of my father building a contraption that sprinkled used motor oil on the gravel road beside our house. He hitched it to his 1953 Chevy pickup, driving it back and forth to keep the dust down. Neighbors who wanted to help with this endeavor, which included everyone living in the four houses at the intersection of College Avenue and Claggett Street, stood on the

Photo shows digging basement

This photo from 1965 shows a conveyer belt hauling earth out of our expanding basement at the corner of College Avenue and Claggett Street in Deer Lodge.

contraption as it bounced along, turning faucet handles that released the oil. It seems gravity created the flow. Possibly it was something more ingenious than that, such as a pump, but time has blurred the details. Dad was blue collar to the core. His first love, I think, was tinkering with machinery. When he wasn’t working inside the walls of Montana State Prison, he was running machines in the detached garage behind our house. He rebuilt motors. He also owned at least a dozen machines for sharpening saws and blades. Often, he kept several running at once, a cacophony of grinding and screeching. Even today, I hear those ear-wrenching sounds.

Dad didn’t sit still for long. I came home from school one day to find the kitchen linoleum rolled and stacked in the corner while he nailed down squeaking floorboards. Sometime in that era he began shoveling outside the kitchen window after dinner. I asked what he was doing. “Digging a basement, after I find the bottom of the foundation.” And he did. I helped, through a cold icy winter, rolling wheelbarrows full of earth from the ever-widening space beneath our house to a rumbling conveyer belt hundreds of times.

I have an unlimited cache of dad stories when I think back to my hometown of Deer Lodge, Montana. Nostalgia and hometowns go together. I have a million stories about my hometown, as do you.

Let me take you back, then.

Can you hear the siren at City Hall sounding curfew at 10 p.m.? Hourly chimes from the bell tower at the Catholic Church? Boxcars slamming in the train yards back in the day when the railroad ruled the town? Meadowlarks on a summer morning? The thumping of a car breaking deep snow after most of Deer Lodge had gone to bed? Movies playing at the Rialto on Main Street?

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Can you see inmates in their lighted cells visible over the old prison wall? Know the blur of a Ferris wheel on an August night when the little carnival came to the Tri-County Fair? See the dawn rising over the eastern mountains and the sun setting behind Mount Powell? Witness the cattle drives through town?

Hometowns are all about diving into our deep well of memories. We remember people who helped us and those who hurt us. Time wipes away most of our painful moments. Hometowns bind people. We meet people who share that hallowed ground and talk for hours. Most other folks, less so. Memories vary between generations as a town’s complexion changes. Still, the foundation is there. People of all ages wear their hometowns like a badge of honor.

Several of my classmates are gone. I’ll mention a few of them: Denis, a fellow Boy Scout, died in a car accident a year after high school graduation. Bob Finch, a microbiologist, died of cancer at 30 years old. Bruce, a blossoming trial attorney, was shot to death in a commuter train robbery in Chicago. Cancer ended Bob’s life a few months after I joined him for breakfast at a restaurant and noticed his yellow pallor. Bill, a National Park Service ranger, died after his lifelong war with diabetes overwhelmed him. Rick, one of my closest friends in high school, fell dead of a heart attack after he quit smoking and lost 50 pounds.

Photo shows cover of Summer of the Black Chevy

Kevin S. Giles wrote ‘Summer of the Black Chevy,’ a novel, which tells the story of teenagers finding their way in life.

I met Rick at the start of my sophomore year. He was one of the toughest kids I knew and one of the kindest. He got a job at the IGA grocery store where his dad worked, earning money to buy cars. The first was a German Ford that belonged to his grandparents. Something went kaput with the transmission on Main Street as were taking two girls for a ride, attempting to impress them. The second was a 1958 Pontiac that caught fire under the hood. I found him dousing it with a garden hose in front of his house. The third car was the best. It was a 1956 Ford, two-tone blue, in fine condition. Rick persuaded me to drive to Butte one Sunday afternoon in February or March. We were halfway there when the engine seized up on the windswept highway. Whether the oil drained out or the coolant was low, the result was the same. I waited in the car, shivering, while he hitchhiked for help. Later, I spent two hours in the bathtub at home thawing out.

One evening at a Wardens football game at the fairgrounds, known as the “cow palace,” Rick joined the cheerleaders in front of the crowd. He was waving a pompon when a kid from Anaconda made fun of him. Insults were exchanged. In instant, Rick threw a flurry of punches, knocking the bigger boy backwards onto the ground. It wasn’t long after that when a couple of boxers from Butte jumped Rick and our friend Don outside the high school gym during a basketball game, beating them to a pulp. Rick came wandering into the gym during the game, dazed and bleeding, crossing the floor to the police chief on the other side.

Rick joined the Marines after high school. We hadn’t seen each other for most of our adult lives. We finally reconnected through Facebook. We made plans to see each other that summer. Then he died.

I remember clearly those hometown moments with Rick. The past cements them together. Hometowns, I think, are best remembered through childhood eyes. It’s possible that people who stay and grow old in their hometowns don’t have the abrupt memories of someone who lived there and left. Adult life has a way of wearing off the sharp edges. Nostalgia isn’t necessarily romantic, or should be romanticized, but it does appeal to our primal need for security and belonging.

I’ve returned to Deer Lodge less frequently over the years. Dad died young and my mother moved away. My hometown looks different and yet very much the same. The population has dwindled. High school enrollment has fallen to less than half of what it was when the town hit its peak in the 1960s. Residents, on average, are older. One of the two Main Street stoplights disappeared long ago.

The town struggles for an infusion of customers for its downtown businesses and, in a broader sense, its identity. It’s a slower town than when I lived there. Some of the most prominent historical buildings, like St. Mary’s Academy, are gone. Dilapidated houses and empty storefronts scream abandonment.

All that noted, Deer Lodge is a place of hope. Other houses and businesses are beautifully kept. The town has a world-class Rialto theater, rebuilt after a devastating fire, and a rare railroad hotel that many residents want to save. It’s got Old Montana Prison Museum, and the Grant-Kohrs National Historic Site, a unit of the National Park Service. The territorial-era buildings on Main Street are worthy of a movie set.

For someone long gone like me, walking the streets of Deer Lodge is like consorting with ghosts. I picture people working in their yards in the years before they died. I hear the yap-yap of sprinklers on summer mornings. I hear the ticking clock in the town library on the mornings I checked the boiler before school. I hear the cadence of the band and the oompahing of my sousaphone as we marched down Milwaukee Avenue on Memorial Day. I see long-ago faces in

Photo shows 1964 street

This is the gravel intersection where my father and our neighbors oiled the gravel road. The dust was terrible in summer. Note the date.

the stores, in the second-story meeting room in the Moose Lodge, in my classrooms at O.D. Speer school and at the Ben Franklin store. I recall the paper and ink smell of the magazine rack at Corner Drug. I see men emptying battered aluminum garbage cans in the alleys, guards standing on the towers at the old prison, our mail carrier pushing a three-wheeled cart full of letters from house to house. I see my dad, Murry, shifting the gears of his pickup as we rode to Downing Chevrolet to load barrels of used motor oil he poured on the road to knock down that cloud of dust around our house.

Hometown memories, we have a million of them. They stay stacked in a closet in the mind until we discover them all over again.

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Western Montana native Kevin S. Giles wrote the popular prison nonfiction work Jerry’s Riot, the coming-of-age novel Summer of the Black Chevy, and a biography of Montana congresswoman Jeannette Rankin, One Woman Against War, which is an expanded version of his earlier work, “Flight of the Dove.” His new novel, Headline: FIRE! is the third in the Red Maguire series. Masks, Mayhem and Murder is the second. The first is “Mystery of the Purple Roses.” More information is available at https://kevinsgiles.com.

15 thoughts on “Most everyone has a hometown. Mine is Deer Lodge, Montana, still fresh in my mind

  1. You certainly know how to pull people into your stories. Love your writing. I was a late comer to Deer Lodge arriving in the early 70’s. My dad grew up in Deer Lodge, his father worked for the Milwaukee RR and my mother grew up on a ranch to the southwest of town. Part of a family that has been in the Valley since 1886. We moved back to the area after my dad retired and I was 15. Even with only 4 or 5 years of life in Deer Lodge I have always considered it my hometown. I really cherish the memories I have of high school and cruising the drag and first love. Thank you for your writing and helping me remember things I haven’t though of in a long while.

  2. I had the pleasure of living in Deer Lodge for nine years. The Milwaukee Road transfered my dad to Deer Lodge in the mid 50s
    So many memories —-st. Mary’s academy, nuns, drug store soda after school, 4bees restaurant Football pep rallies, cattle drives, the prison riot, national guard
    Setting up camp in the football field, us girls going to see the cute army guys giggling all the way there and cruising up and down Main Street.
    I have been in contact thru Facebook with a few of my classmates.
    Great times I will never forget.

  3. Once again, your memories and the way you write them speak to me. I thoroughly enjoyed reading them Kevin.

  4. Brought back so many memories of my hometown. Deer Lodge was a thriving town and a great place to raise a family. I’m glad my roots are there, it was a good solid foundation to base my life on.
    The softball games we would play in the alley in front of the house with the neighborhood kids. Lots of kids. Lots of fun.
    The mosquitoe sprayer that we chased, never thinking it might be bad for us to breathe that poison into our lungs!
    Dad worked for the Anaconda Company first in Anaconda then in Butte. When we were little, he would catch the bus sent by the company to get to work. Later he car pooled then finally drove every working day to Butte. As a supervisor he had a crazy rotating schedule that included a few weeks of day shifts followed by a few weeks afternoons and then the shift all of us in our large family dreaded….. night shift. A large and loud family had to learn to be quiet when he was on night shift.
    Not only did the railroad pulling out hurt our little town but also when ARCO (previously the Anaconda Co.) shut down in Butte and Anaconda it seemed to be the final blow for a once thriving town.

    I miss the Old Deer Lodge. My hometown.

  5. My family, the Hertz’s have been around Montana for a long time. My grandfather was the first county assessor in Granite county and my uncle Dan was the county clerk for something like 50 years. My sister and her husband moved back after they retired.
    My Dad worked at the Milwaukee shops for over 50 years.

    I remember the siren that said it was 9:30 pm curfew and time to go home and get off the streets.

    I worked one summer, like many of those teenagers who were lucky enough to know somebody I guess, at the prison office – the motor vehicle registration office for the state of Montana. I think I made $5 a day, Lot of money in 1950.

    I remember walking to school with the grade school principal, Mr. Speer who lived down the street, and going to the bakery on Saturday for cream puffs.

    Oddly enough I ran into a young man in Denver a few years ago whose last name was Harpole. Asked him if by any chance he was related to the bakery folks and found out that he was their grandson.

    Small world

  6. I am immersed in all the sights and sounds that you’re writing brings to my mind. So many delicious sounds. Your memories of Murray make me smile, he was a delightful, colorful man.Thank you, Kevin.

  7. Wonderful wander through long-gone times & avenues peopled by steadfast enduring souls. My people first arrived there in 1864. When my grandmother passed in 1989, it was a shock to realize that none of our line resides there anymore, after 125 years, except in Hillcrest Cemetery. Love your prose, Kevin, & your marvelous talent for tugging us along through the reminiscences.

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