Inscription
Originally built by Ben Johnson in 1881 as a one-story hotel convenient to Montana Union Railway brakemen, firemen, engineers, and conductors, this residence ballooned in stages with the addition of a basement, upper floors, kitchen, and back rooms. Annie Boland was proprietress in 1885. By 1911, Chris Wolffs advertised furnished rooms.
Wolffs’s widow, Annie, operated a grocery, confectionery, and rooming house here until her death in 1929. Her daughter Anna Stopher Berkley provided a midwife service—perhaps for unwed mothers—and ran the boarding house. Anna’s son Russell took over the longtime family business in 1952, and with his wife, Alma, offered furnished rooms until the mid-1980s.
Recent renovations have produced some surprising hints at a colorful past. New owners discovered women’s Depression-era skull-cap hats stuffed in walls as insulation, 1920s silver coins buried in the basement, hand-painted Hennessy’s streetcar placards used as kitchen walls, candy jars concealed in crawlspaces, and hotel guest registers.
Excavation of a rear cesspool yielded a Model A Ford and a turn-of-the-century handgun.
Location
Sources
More markers in Silver Bow
614 North Alaska
Butte, MT
Close proximity to the Original and Stewart mines guaranteed a steady stream of miners to keep the beds of this boardinghouse occupied.
431 West Mercury
Butte, MT
A round turreted entry with an elaborate porch is the focal point of this Queen Anne style home.
J. Fred and Sophia Gamer Residence
Butte, MT
Ornamental wooden brackets tucked under wide overhanging eaves, spacious dormers, exposed rafter tails, and a full-length front porch...
Wynne / Conroy Residence
Butte, MT
Scattered development marked this Butte neighborhood during the 1890s as the population grew and the demand for all types of housing...
819 North Henry Avenue
Butte, MT
Butte’s voracious appetite for laborers created a huge demand for housing and sent rental rates skyrocketing beyond the means of most...
