*** Welcome to piglix ***

Alice Creek Historic District

Alice Creek Historic District
Hwy 200 to Lincoln.JPG
Alice Creek Historic District, Highway 200 to Lincoln
Nearest city Lincoln, Montana
Area 5,425 acres (2,195 ha)
Built 1806 (1806)
NRHP Reference # 06000531
Added to NRHP June 6, 2007

The Alice Creek Historic District is a historic district in the Lincoln Ranger District of Helena National Forest,Lincoln, Montana, Lewis and Clark County, Montana.Lichenometry was used for the process of nominating it for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places; "rock cairns, stone forts, fire hearths, and a Celtic cross" were found as a result. There are no buildings within the historic district. There is a marshy area at the bottom of Alice Creek, sage flats, and many trees.

The regions has been used for five thousand years by Native Americans. The primary trail in this area is the Cokahlarishkit Trail, which is a Nez Perce that means "Road to the Buffalo Trail" or "Buffalo Road River" and were long used by Native Americans. The Cokahlarishkit Trail provides the most direct route to traverse through this region of North America. After departing Traveler's Rest near Lolo, Montana, on their return trip, Meriwether Lewis' part of the Lewis and Clark Expedition explored the Alice Creek region in July 1806 and used the Cokahlarishkit Trail. This trail is now part of the Lewis and Clark Trail. Father Nicholas Point, a French Jesuit, built a stone cross here in September 28, 1842. Father Pierre-Jean De Smet also explored the region. The Alice Creek Guard Station was built here by the United States Forest Service in 1920. "The data indicates that two cairns in Landers Fork and two of the cairns in Alice Creek are Native American in origin and that one of the cairns in Alice Creek is possibly Euro-American in origin. The data indicates that the stone lookout is Native American in origin and the data also supports the theory that the stone cross is indeed associated with Father Point."


...
Wikipedia

...