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Clyde Park
In 1900 it was moved to the present site of Clyde Park, at a four-way crossroad. The branches led to farms and ranches—one to Rock Creek Ranch, one to Brackett Creek, one to White Sulphur Springs, and one to Livingston. Supplies in the early days were hauled into Clyfe Park by Jim Bowen, known as the “Cayuse Kid,” who freighted with a twenty-four horse jerk line. By 1914 the Northern Pacific Railroad was making its run up Shields Valley past Clyde Park six times a week (Dorothy Patten, Park County News). (from Cheney’s Names on the Face of Montana, Mountain Press Publishing Company) The Crazy Mountains and the Bridger Range provide a breathtaking view for Clyde Park nestled in the Shields Valley between these two mountain ranges. The area is excellent for hiking, snowmobiling, and cross-country skiing. Clyde Park also offers varied opportunities get a taste of what life is really like in rural Montana and to experience a working cattle ranch. Branding calves, sorting cattle, trailing cattle to and from summer pastures, harvesting hay for the winter: This has been the pattern shaping the lives of Clyde Park’s ranchers for nearly a hundred and fifty years.
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