Mining history in Montana
Hello GoingWest,
Hopefully you'll have a chance to stay in Missoula for a time. It's a great town. Be sure to breakfast at The Oxford early in your stay for some real, and eclectic, local flavor.
Butte has a great mining museum which is well worth the modest price of admission. Much of the Old West history is mining-related, so that seems to fit your desires. Also in Butte is an observation deck overlooking the Berkeley Pit, one of the largest open-pit mines on Earth. The Pit speaks to more recent mining activity, but is shouldn't be missed as long as you're in Butte.
Just west and just a handful of miles off of I-90 is Anaconda, with one of the world's tallest smokestacks at the decommissioned copper smelter there. I'm told there's a good mining museum in Anaconda, too, and I plan to visit it myself in July of this year.
The Grant-Kohrs Ranch, an attraction depicting the massive scale beef cattle ranching history of Montana is at Deer Lodge, just west of Anaconda. Again, I've never been there, but have read much about it.
Taking "The Scenic Route" (MT Highway 1) from Anaconda back to I-90 bypasses Deer Lodge but buys you a trip through Philipsburg, Montana's coolest little town (shussssssh--please don't tell anybody). A handful of miles away from P'burg is the ghost town of Granite, another exhibit of MT mining history.
Have fun planning and taking your RoadTrip.
Foy