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Daniel Webster Tilton Family papers

 Collection
Identifier: MC-111

Scope and Contents

This collection contains the personal, business, and political materials of D.W. Tilton, Orlando Beach Barber, Joseph Corby, and various other members of the three families. Correspondence, financial records, biographical material, legal documents, ephemera, clippings, writings, speeches, diaries, and miscellany are included. Subgroups in the collection are D. W. Tilton; Tilton Family; O.B. Barber; Barber Family; Joseph Corby; Corby Family; Tilton and Barber; Tilton Brothers; Ogden, Means and Company, and Miscellany which includes unidentified materials or items that could not be related to any of the other subgroups.

Dates

  • Creation: 1851-1976

Creator

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access

Collection open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Researchers must use collection in accordance with the policies of the Montana Historical Society. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all materials in the collection. In some cases permission for use may require additional authorization from the copyright owners. For more information contact an archivist.

Biographical / Historical

Daniel Webster Tilton was born in Silver Creek, New York, on July 3, 1839, the only child of John and Angeline Tilton. He studied at the Bryant and Stratton Business College in 1859, and then travelled to Missouri and Colorado. During the gold rush, he was engaged in business ventures, initially at Denver and later at Central City. In 1863, Tilton left Colorado and travelled to Virginia City, in what was then Idaho Territory, opening the town's first store, "D.W. Tilton Co. news dealers, book sellers, stationers, & job printers, Virginia City, I.T." He transported the first hand press to the territory and bought a newspaper, The Montana Post, from John Buchanan for $3,000. Tilton published the newspaper and did other printing jobs (such as an 1866 5,000 copy edition of The Vigilantes) until 1868, when he sold out to Benjamin Dittes. Tilton returned to New York in the winter of 1865, to marry his cousin, Lizzie D. May (1841-1866). The couple travelled to Virginia City the following spring, but Lizzie Tilton died of consumption on October 25, 1866, at the age of 25. Tilton remarried in May 1868, to Helen Elvira Barber (1850-1924) of Pennsylvania, a distant relative of his first wife. In the early 1870s, Tilton joined with his father-in-law, Orlando Beach Barber (1828-1913), to form Tilton and Barber, "wholesale and retail dealers in groceries, wines, and liquors, books and stationery, cigars and tobacco, powder and fuse, & c. & c.," located on Wallace Street. This partnership lasted until 1883. With the decline of Virginia City, Tilton moved his business to Butte in 1884. D.W. Tilton's Book Store, located first at 63 West Park Street and later at 138 West Park, handled job printing, blank books, school books, ink, paper, newspapers, novels, and magazines. Tilton and his wife raised a family of six children: Web, John (1871-1885), Orlando Beach (1876-1959), Charles Lester (1878-1948), Howard Lee (1890-1957), and Helen. Tilton and his sons, operating under the name of Tilton Brothers, maintained business interests in ranching and mining developments, primarily the Highland Mining Company of Butte. O.B. Barber also left Virginia City in the 1880s, becoming proprietor of Valley View Farm of Laurin, Montana. He and his wife Samantha (1830-1899) later owned a ranch near Sheridan and were joined in its operation by their son, Charles W. Barber (1856-1933), and the Tilton grandsons. The ranch remained in the family for four generations, until it was sold in 1973 by Corby H. Tilton. The Tilton family was linked through marriage to the Corby family of Butte. (Edith Lillian Corby, daughter of Joseph and Sena Corby, married Howard Lee Tilton, the youngest son of D.W. Tilton.) Joseph Corby, who was born in 1866 in Pennsylvania, came west at the age of 19, and worked as a hoisting engineer in the Butte mines. He served as an officer of the First Montana Volunteers in the Philippines during the Spanish-American War. In 1906, he attended the Tenth Montana Legislative Assembly as a Republican and then was elected mayor of Butte (1907-1909). Corby died in Butte in 1917. D.W. Tilton spent the last years of his life in Grace, Montana, and on the family ranch. He died in Sheridan on October 15, 1919.

Extent

5 linear feet

Abstract

D.W. Tilton (1839-1919) was a Virginia City, Montana, newspaper publisher and book store owner. Collection (1851-1976) includes correspondence, financial records, legal documents, photographs, writings, and clippings. There are subgroups for the O.B. Barber family of Virginia City and Sheridan; and the Joseph Corby family of Butte. [RESTRICTION: Family retains all literary rights.]

Arrangement

Arranged by subgroup and series.

Physical Location

5:8-1

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Acquisition information available upon request

Separated Materials

Maps and printed material transferred to Library. Photographs transferred to Photo Archives. Artifacts transferred to Museum. See inventory below for more information.

Title
Guide to the Daniel Webster Tilton Family papers 1851-1976
Author
Finding aid prepared by MHS staff
Date
2004
Description rules
Finding Aid Based On Dacs ( Describing Archives: A Content Standard 2nd Edition)
Language of description
English
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
Finding aid written in English.
Sponsor
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Repository Details

Part of the Montana Historical Society, Research Center Archives Repository

Contact:
225 North Roberts
PO Box 201201
Helena MT 59620-1201 United States
406-444-2681
406-444-2696 (Fax)