
Butte-Silver Bow County
Courthouse
155 W. Granite Street,
Butte, Montana
Historically this part of town was
the place where the Butte County Courthouse and jail has always stood,
from the very beginning of the town. The original courthouse was a structure
that by 1908 was deemed a little too funky and ratty looking for the booming,
rich mining town of Butte, so a new, grander courthouse was started in
1910, built upon the same lot where the old one had stood. It was finished
by 1912. It was and is one of the West's most beautiful public buildings,
designed in the Beaux Arts style. It cost 482,600 dollars and was financed
by public bonds.
Today, this impressive courthouse
building is used as office space for county government employees and officials.
The modern jail was built across the street just to the east of the building.
HISTORY OF MANIFESTATIONS:
A miner named Miles Fuller was convicted
of killing another prospector probably over a claim or a card game. While
a prisoner, he was kind and thoughtful to the guards, leaving thank you
notes with the empty food trays, while being held in the jail next to
the courthouse.
Because he received the death sentence,
Miles was executed by hanging via the portable gallows which were set
up in the yard, which was located on the north side of the jail behind
the courthouse on May 18, 1906. As his coffin was being placed on the
funeral wagon by his pallbearers, a loud crack-like noise, sounding like
thunder, was heard by the living, bringing up the possibility to those
who heard it that he may have been innocent of the murder. UH OH!
MANIFESTATIONS:
Throughout the years, an apparition
looking just like Miles has been seen wandering around this same yard,
by the back door of the courthouse ground floor.
Cold spots have been felt in the ground
floor offices, and doors have opened and shut by themselves.
STILL HAUNTED?
Yes, it seems to be. Although the
old courthouse has long been torn down, this gentle spirit still haunts
the land where it once stood by wandering the old gallows yard and occasionally
visiting the inside of the ground floor area of the present courthouse
building, which is also next to the outside yard area where Miles was
executed via the gallows almost 100 years ago.
Miles is perhaps still looking for
something at the scene of his death, needing to perhaps to clear his name
before passing on to the other side. Or perhaps though he was justly convicted,
he wasn't ready to die just yet. |