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Coordinates: 44°33′31″N 112°18′20″W / 44.55861°N 112.30556°W / 44.55861; -112.30556
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[[Category:Rail mountain passes]]
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[[Category:Great Divide of North America]]
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Revision as of 19:26, 11 April 2009

Monida Pass

Monida Pass (el. 6,820 feet (2,079 m)) is a high mountain pass on the Continental Divide in the Rocky Mountains that divides the Beaverhead Range and the Centennial Range. Its name is derived from those of the states it separates, Montana and Idaho.[2]

The pass forms part of the border between southeastern Idaho and Montana and is between the towns of Lima, Montana, and Spencer, Idaho. Clark County, Idaho, and Beaverhead County, Montana, border each other on the pass. On the Idaho side is Beaver Creek running through Beaver Canyon, Idaho, which was the route of the Utah and Northern Railway in 1880 and is still used by Union Pacific Railroad.[3]

A disused barn on Monida Pass

Union Pacific once had an icemaking plant at Humphrey, Idaho, which is now a ghost town; Monida, Montana, which is near the top of the pass, is also almost a ghost town.

Humphrey, Idaho
Monida, Montana

In the late 1800s stagecoaches ferried tourists from the railroad at Monida Pass to Yellowstone Park, until UP bult a branch line to the park. Interstate 15, "Veterans memorial highway," starts at the Montana-Idaho border at Monida Pass and runs to the international boundary with Canada at Sweetgrass.[4]

References

  • Ferrel, Hauck, Myers (1981). Colorado Rail Annual No. 15. the Colorado Railroad Museum. US 0-918654-15-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Idaho: A Climbing Guide - 76. Retrieved 4 March 2007.
  • USDA Forest Service - Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest - Cultural Resources - Historic Period. Retrieved 4 March 2007.
  • Idaho Museum of Natural History - Digital Atlas of Idaho - "A Brief Introduction to Idaho." Retrieved 4 March 2007.

44°33′31″N 112°18′20″W / 44.55861°N 112.30556°W / 44.55861; -112.30556