In Tracing Artistic Memories and Mysteries of Yellowstone and Glacier, retired MTHS historian Dr. Ellen Baumler explores how painting,
photography, literature, oral culture, and music have given us powerful incentives to visit Montana’s parks and preserve these majestic resources.
All content for MontanaHistoricalSociety is the property of MontanaHistoricalSociety and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In Tracing Artistic Memories and Mysteries of Yellowstone and Glacier, retired MTHS historian Dr. Ellen Baumler explores how painting,
photography, literature, oral culture, and music have given us powerful incentives to visit Montana’s parks and preserve these majestic resources.
Before 1889, Montana exerted little oversight of those who claimed to be healers. Starting that year, however, the state required all medical practitioners to register with the newly formed State Board of Medical Examiners. Dr. Todd L. Savitt, historian of medicine at East Carolina University’s Brody School of Medicine, reveals a group demographic picture of the doctors who did (and did not) register and tells stories of some particularly interesting physicians in that group.
MontanaHistoricalSociety
In Tracing Artistic Memories and Mysteries of Yellowstone and Glacier, retired MTHS historian Dr. Ellen Baumler explores how painting,
photography, literature, oral culture, and music have given us powerful incentives to visit Montana’s parks and preserve these majestic resources.