Capps Family and Zieg Family papers
Content Description
Capps Family and Zieg Family papers (circa 1908-1998) collection consists of family correspondence including diaries kept by Mydas Zieg (nee Capps) from 1920 to 1997, letters from Willard Kirkham Capps Byam to her children (circa 1930s) as well as letters from Philip Zieg to his parents, Mydas Capps Zieg and Reuben Zieg, while serving in the military and working for the Bureau of Land Management (1957-1998), Christmas letters from Mydas Capps Zieg (1948-1980), amongst letters from other relatives. 1 Diary of Wilard Kirkham entitiled "My Life Mother" (1932) Biographical information including family tree and history created by Mydas Capps Zieg, timeline, birth certificates and marriage licenses; Expense ledger; and News clippings. Also included are year books from both Mydas and Reuben collected both as students and as educators.
Dates
- Creation: circa 1908-1998
Biographical
Willard Byam (nee Kirkham) was born December 18, 1889 in Hollister, CA. She homesteaded in Alberta, Canada in 1905. In 1907 she married Charles G. Capps. After the birth of their daughter, Mydas, the family relocated to New Mexico after Charles contracted tuberculosis. Following the death of Charles in 1912, Willard and Mydas moved to California. She worked odd jobs over the years to support herself and her daughter. In 1933 she married Ray Byam. After the passing of Ray she moved to Missoula, MT to be with her daughter’s family. She passed away on February 20, 1974 Mydas Capps Zieg was born March 7, 1908, on a homestead in Alberta, Canada to Charles and Willard Capps. After the death of her father from Tuberculosis, her mother and her moved to California. They moved numerous time, which disrupted Mydas’s studies. Despite this, she completed requirements for high school graduation. She went on to attend Santa Ana Junior College and the University of California, Berkeley, receiving a B.A. in English in 1929. After college she took a teaching job in Rapelje, MT teaching English, speech, drama and coaching girls’ basketball. It is here where she met Reuben Zieg, the match and science teacher. Rueben Zieg was born June 15, 1908 in Stockham, Nebraska to George Adam Zieg and Anna Maria Zieg. Reuben had come from Hastings College in Nebraska. They married in 1932. After teaching for a year in Harlowtown, Mydas joined Reuben in Dixon and then Alberton where he was high school principal. In 1945 they moved to Missoula. Reuben taught math at Missoula County High School while Mydas became active in AAUW and PTA. She would eventually serve as president of the state PTA. During the 1950s she lobbied the state legislature to pass laws requiring elected rather than appointed school boards (at which she succeeded). They began a new career in her 60s as Missoula’s Deputy County Superintendent of Schools. Reuben passed away on February 24, 1993 in Missoula. Mydas passed away on April 6, 1998 in Missoula. Philip Wayne Zieg was born in Missoula on Dec. 26, 1937, the first of five children of Mydas and Reuben Zieg. He began grade school in Alberton, graduated from Missoula County High School in 1955, and enrolled in the School of Forestry at Montana State University (now the University of Montana). He spent the summer after his freshman year on the Indian Graves fire lookout on the Powell Ranger District in Idaho. The following summer, he did government timber surveys in Alaska. Philip joined the Army at Christmas in 1957. He expected to be sent to Europe. Instead, on Feb. 7, 1958, he was admitted to Ireland Army Hospital in Fort Knox, Kentucky, with staphylococcus pneumonia. In a late-night phone call, a doctor urged Philip’s parents in Missoula to come immediately to Fort Knox if they wanted to see their son alive. Philip’s mother flew from Missoula that same night to be at his bedside. His doctors had warned that even if Philip lived, he would likely be severely brain-damaged by the prolonged high fever. Thus, his recovery seemed miraculous. Continued medical treatment took him from Fort Knox to Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C. and Fitzsimons Army Hospital in Colorado. Because of the lung damage caused by his pneumonia, Philip eventually received a medical discharge from the Army and re-enrolled in school where he focused on range management. After graduating in 1961 with a Bachelor of Science in forestry, Philip’s career path continued in McCall, Idaho, Prineville and Eugene, Oregon, Las Vegas and Battle Mountain, Nevada, and Richfield, Utah. Philip passed away on December 5, 2014 in Missoula.
Extent
2.7 linear feet (7 Hollinger boxes)
10 Volumes (10 Volumes)
Language of Materials
English
Topical
- Title
- Guide to the Capps Family and Zieg Family papers
- Author
- Anneliese Warhank
- Date
- 2018
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the Montana Historical Society, Research Center Archives Repository
225 North Roberts
PO Box 201201
Helena MT 59620-1201 United States
406-444-2681
406-444-2696 (Fax)
mhslibrary@mt.gov