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Montana Study Research Collection

 Collection
Identifier: MC-270

Scope and Contents

This is an artificial collection, created by photocopying records from several different institutions to gather in one place all pertinent records of The Montana Study.

Records include correspondence (1943-1954) among Baker Brownell, Bert Hanson, Ruth Robinson, Joseph Kinsey Howard, the Rockefeller Foundation, the University of Montana, and others concerning the planning of the grant, the administration of the Study, and the progress of the various local study groups. In addition, there are conference materials; employee records; financial records; records of local study groups in Arlee, Conrad, Darby, Dixon, Hamilton, Lewistown, Libby, Lonepine, Stevensville, Troy, Victor, and Woodman; scattered minutes; organizational materials; reports; speeches and writings by Brownell, Hanson, Robinson, Howard, and others; and miscellany.

A small subgroup of Secondary Materials includes a Masters thesis by Carla Homstad entitled Small Town Eden : the Montana Study (University of Montana, 1987) and a manuscript of the 4th edition of Life in Montana, as seen in Wibaux, a Small Community by John L. Schwechton and Ray Gold (1976).

Dates

  • Creation: 1943-1954

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Any citation of this collection must include a credit to the source of the original. Publication of any material from the collection must have permission of source of original.

Historical Note:

The Montana Study was a sociological project, conducted by the University of Montana under funds provided by the Rockefeller Foundation, to use the humanities to contribute to improving the lives of people in small communities.

The project was the vision of Ernest O. Melby, Chancellor of the University of Montana System. Melby believed that by creating a common awareness of Montana's heritage the people of the state would develop a deeper devotion to the welfare of the community, state, and country. From this awareness and devotion there would come concerted action to correct community problems and to reverse some of the forces of social decay, which he saw as a threat to the democratic way of life.

In the early 1940s, Montana State College in Bozeman conducted a Rockefeller Foundation grant-funded project entitled "Northern Plains in a World of Change", which was designed to study the region, enumerate its problems, and look at possible solutions. At a faculty meeting in Bozeman Chancellor Melby met David H. Stevens, Director of Humanities for the Rockefeller Foundation. This meeting eventually led to the funding of The Montana Study by the Rockefeller Foundation.

In planning the project Melby and Stevens consulted Baker Brownell of Northwestern University, a noted authority on the problems of rural life. Brownell turned Melby's vision into a practical project by formulating specific objectives and devising means of carrying them out. His objectives for the Study were: 1) to get the University off the campus by extending its educational services directly to the people in their home towns, 2) to find ways of stabilizing the family and the small community, and 3) to study ways of raising the "appreciative and spiritual standard of living of the people of the state and thus keep a larger number of able young people in their home communities."

On July 1, 1944, Melby resigned as Chancellor and became President of Montana State University at Missoula. He was immediately made responsible for The Montana Study. He hired Baker Brownell as project director. Two half-time positions were filled by Paul Meadows, a sociologist from Northwestern University, and Joseph Kinsey Howard, an author and journalist from Great Falls. The project was supported by a state-wide advisory group the Montana Committee.

The Montana Study was conducted in three phases: a community field work phase using local community study groups, a special projects phase, and a leadership training phase. Local study groups were set up only in towns which requested them. Eventually groups met in Lonepine, Darby, Stevensville, Conrad, Lewistown, Libby, Hamilton, Victor, and two on the Flathead Indian Reservation: the Dixon group consisting of white community members, part-blood Indians, and Bureau of Indian Affairs staff and the Full Blood Flathead Indian Group at Arlee. The local study groups met to discuss the problems of their local communities, to study their local history, and to propose solutions. Several of the groups produced historical pageants as a way of raising the self-awareness of the community.

The special projects and leadership training phases did not develop to the extent that the study groups did. However, they did result in a number of studies and publications, lectures, conferences, and academic course outlines for local school teachers and community leaders.

At the end of the second year of the project Baker Brownell returned to Northwestern University and was replaced as Acting Director by Ruth W. Robinson, leader of the Conrad Study Group. Paul Meadows and Joseph Kinsey Howard also left the Study and were replaced by Frank H. Smith, an educator in community arts and recreation, and Bert B. Hansen, a Montana State University drama professor.

The Montana Study officially ended July 19, 1947, due in part to political controversy over its mildly left wing orientation and its academic "egg-head" image. However, many of the people involved in the Study continued working on the project without official funding, and the Montana Study continued to function on an informal basis into the early 1950s.

Extent

3.5 linear feet

Abstract

The Montana Study was a sociological project, conducted by the University of Montana under funds provided by the Rockefeller Foundation. Records include correspondence (1943-1954), conference materials, local study group records, minutes, reports, speeches and writings, and miscellany. (Photocopies of records at various institutions)

Arrangement

Arranged by subgroup and series.

Physical Location

14:3-2

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Acquisition information available upon request

Existence and Location of Copies

Originals are available at the various contributing institutions.

Processing Information

This is a composite research collection consisting of photocopies of records at the Montana Historical Society (University of Montana System Records, and Joseph Kinsey Howard Papers); University of Montana; Montana State University; Rockefeller Foundation; Northwestern University (Baker Brownell Papers); University of Michigan; and Bitter Root Historical Society (Jim Parker Papers). Materials were also photocopied from the private collections of Steward Brandborg, Inez Ratekin Herrig, and Jim Parker. The research to locate the materials and the photocopying was done by Douglas Dodge and Carla Homstad, with support from the Liz Claiborne and Arthur Ortenberg Foundation.

Title
Guide to the Montana Study research collection 1943-1954
Author
Finding aid prepared by Kathryn Otto and Ellie Arguimbau, 1995
Date
2006
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)