The Bonner Milltown area is a collection of neighborhoods, old and new. The cleanup, restoration, and redevelopment of the Clark Fork and Blackfoot rivers and their confluence and the shut down and subsequent sale of the mill has brought unprecedented change to this once stable community in the span of a decade.
Change can be unsettling, but it offers tremendous potential as well. These stories chronicle events as they are unfolding.

faith-and-climate-changeWhy People of Faith Should be Engaged in Climate Change, and How We Can Make a Difference

Monday November 16, 7:00pm, University Center Theater, University of Montana. Free parking. All are welcome!
Questions? Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Panel members include:

  •  Len Broberg, professor of Environmental Studies Global context of the upcoming UN climate change negotiations in Paris
  •  Rev. Joseph Carver, pastor at St. Francis Xavier Church Pope Francis’ encyclical: caring for our “common home”
  •  Dan Spencer, co-author of Earth Ethics and Professor of Environmental Studies Religious and ethical perspectives motivating engagement on climate change
  •  Caroline Lauer, Program Associate, Climate Smart Missoula Climate initiatives in Missoula: practical ways to get involved

 

The Blackfoot Challenge celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2013 and used the opportunity to reevaluate its work and mission. Friends of 2 Rivers assisted by helping with the Partners Tour of the Lower Blackfoot in June and with the Land and Community Discussions at Bonner in September. In July, 2014 Friends of 2 Rivers will lead tours at the confluence for the Society for Conservation Biology meeting.

Billy Izzard has a dream - a community garden that grows not only vegetables but community relationships and children heathy in mind and body. He started the garden in 2009 for local residents and school children to have a space for producing local, healthy food. Visit Milltown Garden Patch on Facebook for more information.

The Piltzville Trail was constructed by EPA during the Milltown Reservoir cleanup to provide a safe way to school for children who had been crossing the tracks on a social path in Piltzville. Once the train transport of sediments began, that path was fenced and the community became the recipient of a new paved trail extending from the junction of Highways 200 and 210 all the way to the Turah interchange and across, linking to Rustic Road where a gravel foot and equestrian trail looped back on the frontage road.

The Superfun(d) Run is held annually in May and a lighting project is underway. Eagle Scout Patrick Friede's project provided 8 lights.

A melding of projects of the Milltown Superfund Redevelopment Working Group and the Bonner Area History Roundtable, the Bonner Milltown History Center's mission is “Keeping our local area and timber heritage alive for the enjoyment and education of the public."  

Visit online bonnermilltownhistory.org/ the virtual interpretive center dedicated to the human and natural history of the Confluence of the Clark Fork and Blackfoot Rivers and surrounding communities or go to the Bonner Milltown History Center in the Bonner Post Office Building, 9397 Hwy 200 E., Bonner, MT 59823

 

The Bonner Milltown History Center is open Tuesday mornings from 9:00 - noon. Stop in for coffee and conversation. Public hours are Wednesday from 10 - noon. Join the Old Roads and Rabbit Holes group as they explore a wide range of history topics on Friday, 10 - noon.

 

For more information or to arrange a visit, email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Website: https://bonnermilltownhistory.org/


 

 

Go to top