Inscription
English immigrants Frances and Henry Hay came to Helena in the mid-1860s and were among the first to settle on West Main where Hay mined a claim. Their log cabin became the center of the present residence, built circa 1870. A switchback path leads to a small mother-in-law house. Hay and neighbors Joseph Poad and Benjamin Benson operated the New Water Company from 1883 until circa 1888 when the City of Helena bought their water rights extending to Reeder’s Alley.
Hay ran a fuel business, employing five of his six sons as teamsters. The Hays kept a watering trough out front for teams passing by. The family kept horses and dairy cows in the board-and-batten barn and used the shed as a creamery. Like many of their neighbors, the Hays built the shed into the hillside to MT NATIONAL REGISTER SIGN TEXT 1990 TO APRIL 2019 keep their dairy products cool.
The Hay homestead well represents the self-sufficiency and industry of early Helena pioneers. In 2004, property owner and Hay descendant Margie Broderick, local preservationists, and the Montana Conservation Corps worked together to stabilize the historic barn.
Location
Sources
More markers in Lewis & Clark
Forestvale Cemetery
Helena, MT
In 1889, the year Montana became a state, the growing city of Helena realized its need for a cemetery in addition to the three sponsored...
First National Bank - Securities Building
Helena, MT
This magnificent structure was the second home of Montana Territory’s first bank, chartered in 1866.
C.B. Power Residence
Helena, MT
The home of territorial Governor Benjamin Potts sat on this property from the 1870s until this grand residence was built for prominent...
Henry Sieben Home
Helena, MT
Henry Sieben came to Montana a seventeen-year-old uneducated orphan and rose to pioneer Montana’s livestock industry.
Lewis and Clark County Jail
Helena, MT
Masterful stonework of local granite in the Romanesque style creates a somber effect in this 1890 institution.
