Courtesy of Merrill RiChey Meredith comes this photo of the 1900 Central School eighth-grade class. Merrill also supplied an invaluable old handwritten list of names to accompany the photo.
I checked the handwritten names against ancestry.com and Helena newspaper archives, and corrected spellings as needed. Only a couple of names were untraceable.
Here are the names:
TOP ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: James Stewart, Myrtle Buehl (Buell?), Jessie Baxter, Pauline Zietz (Gates), Lillian Vawter, Gretchen King, Will B___?, Elma Barnes, Sarah Emma Gamer, Abraham Lawrence Goodman, Katie Merrill, Lillian Mary Whalen.
SECOND ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: Joseph Aloysius Seiler, Miss Nannie C. Fortune (teacher), Frances Lemke, Isabelle Lindsay, Gertrude Heisey, Miss Harriet Garvin (teacher), Mary Tobel, Bessie Mason (Burns), Mona Valiant, John Sanford
THIRD ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: George Tremper, Will Auerbach, Raymond Hartwig, Agnes Selgrove, Signe Graiff, Norman LaReau, Alice Lissner, Harold Augustus Eyl, Norma R. Craig, Christine Dempster (Williams), Eugene Wilson
FOURTH ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: Blanche Southwick, Katherine A. Hehl (Higgins), John Edgar Lockey, Gorham Wesley Roberts, William Brulo, Blanche V. Ashall, William P. Cottingham
While looking up the names, it was very tempting to look deeper into the records for each individual, because everyone has a fascinating story.
Many thanks to Merrill for sharing!
A colorized 1910 view of the Helena Cab Co., which was on the northeast corner of Park and Edwards.
This Moorish Revival livery stable and garage was built in 1907 by Joseph Murray and Jacob Fischer, both notables in the Helena livery business.
It was an up-to-date facility, advertising a horsey-odor-free experience for customers, along with other modern conveniences such as a separate waiting room for women.
From the start, plans were in place to dedicate part of the facility to the repair and servicing of automobiles, which was ultimately its function over the decades.
This building was last known as the Porter Garage, and was demolished in 1968, at the start of Helena's Urban Renewal projects.
Elements of the Moorish Revival design of the building are certainly reminiscent of the 1921 Helena Civic Center, but I'm unsure if the same architect was involved.
The illustration is from the souvenir booklet of the 26th Annual Encampment of the Montana Grand Army of the Republic ...
A then-and-now view of Neill Avenue, highlighting Eck's Toys and Hobbies in 1974. Eck's was a happy destination for many Helena kids and hobbyists.
Norm and Elaine Eck originally opened the shop at 15 Placer St. in October of 1959. It was moved to the Neill Ave. location, a former garage, in October of 1963. Eck sold the business to Joe and Arlene King in 1974.
Vintage photo courtesy of Janet Eck Bloom.
The earthquake-shattered 1890 Montana National Guard Arsenal, 1029 (now numbered 1025) N. Warren St. The rear of the building was also badly damaged.
Guard equipment continued to be stored in the wrecked Arsenal until it was finally demolished in the spring of 1939. The lot remained vacant until at least 1955.
For more about the Arsenal, please take the link in the comments below...