Looking at the map today, Kendrick, Idaho, and Kalispell, Montana, seem worlds apart—separated by 300 miles of some of the most rugged, vertical terrain in North America. But for two young, adventurous brothers like Franklin Jackson Bailey (22) and David Leonard Bailey (18) in 1908, that border wasn't a barrier; it was a gateway.
Several powerful, intersecting forces drew my grandfather and grand-uncle out of Idaho and into the historic timber and mountain valleys of Montana.
The Great Flathead Land Rush
The primary magnet pulling the Bailey brothers toward Kalispell was the legendary Homesteading Boom. While the original Homestead Act of 1862 offered 160 acres, Congress passed the Enlarged Homestead Act of 1909, doubling the free land allotment to 320 acres.
Simultaneously, the federal government announced the opening of the Flathead Indian Reservation to non-Native settlement, culminating in a massive land lottery registration in 1909 and official entry in 1910. Kalispell was one of the primary, booming registration hubs where thousands of young men flocked to secure a piece of the American dream. For two brothers looking to establish their own futures away from the family home in Kendrick, the promise of virgin, fertile land in the Flathead Valley was irresistible.
🦌 Unrivaled Hunting & Frontier Wilderness
The early 1900s photographs we possess of Franklin and David hunting deer and elk capture the pure, raw wilderness that made Montana a paradise for young outdoorsmen. While Idaho had its own wilderness, the Flathead Valley and the surrounding Rocky Mountains were legendary for their abundant game, pristine alpine lakes, and untamed backcountry. For two young men, a hunting trip into the Montana mountains wasn't just about putting meat on the table—it was a rite of passage and the ultimate frontier adventure.
⚔️ The Allure of the 2nd Montana Infantry (Company H)
When the brothers decided to join the Montana National Guard's 2nd Infantry, they were stepping into a newly professionalized, prestigious brotherhood. The timing was perfect:
- The Dick Act Modernization: Thanks to the Militia Act of 1903 (and its major 1908 updates), the Guard had just been re-equipped with modern US Army firearms, standardized uniforms, and structured training. It was no longer a loose local militia; it carried immense social status and pride.
- The Travel & The Paycheck: Enlisting gave the brothers guaranteed, supplemental income funded by the federal government—a vital economic boost for young men eyeing their own future homesteads. Because the Guard operated a decentralized, statewide network, Company H drew its roster locally from the Kalispell region.
- The Summer Encampments: Signing up didn't mean living in a barracks 300 miles away. They lived and worked locally in the region, but their enlistment gave them an all-expenses-paid ticket to travel across the Continental Divide to Fort William Henry Harrison near Helena for annual summer training camps. For an 18- and 22-year-old, this was an unmatched summer escape filled with shooting competitions, military camaraderie, and statewide travel.
📜 Echoes of the Flathead: The Adventures of Frank and David
Celebrating America 250
In the crisp autumn of 1908, the morning mist hung low over the Potlatch River valley near Kendrick, Idaho, but the eyes of the Bailey brothers were fixed firmly on the rising eastern horizon. Franklin, a sturdy young man of twenty-two, and his eighteen-year-old brother, David Leonard, could hear the distant rumble of a changing West. Montana was calling.
It wasn't a draft or a government mandate that pulled them across the Bitterroot Range—it was the timeless American itch for adventure and the promise of free, untamed land. The newspapers were full of talk about the Flathead Valley, a place of giant timber, crystal-clear waters, and hundreds of thousands of acres opening up to anyone with the grit to clear it.
With rifles slung over their shoulders and packs on their backs, the brothers rode into the sprawling wilderness of Flathead County. Our old photographs capture them perfectly in their element: two brothers standing tall against the big sky, proud smiles on their faces as they brought down elk and deer in the deep mountain draws, learning the seasonal rhythms of the country that would soon become home.
To anchor themselves to this grand new territory, the boys walked into the local armory and signed their names to the rosters of Company H, 2nd Montana Infantry. Clad in their crisp, new olive-drab wool uniforms, they found themselves at the very heart of the community. They spent their winters sharpening their marksman skills alongside local loggers and ranchers, and when summer arrived, they boarded the trains heading over the mountains to Fort William Henry Harrison. There, amidst the thunder of brass bands and the smoke of rifle ranges, they trained like regular soldiers under the shadow of Mount Helena, their pockets lined with federal coin that would help fund their frontier dreams.
By the time the adventure transitioned into the quiet permanence of settlement, the land had captured Franklin’s heart completely. The roaming years gave way to a pioneer's devotion. By 1912, the hunter and guardsman had become a husband and a builder, marrying his bride, Lydia Corinna Brown, and planting his roots deep into the fertile soil of Kalispell.
The uniform was put away and the rifles were cleaned and hung over the mantle, but the fierce, independent spirit of those Montana adventures remained—ready to be handed down to a little girl named Velma Veda, and through her, to the generations yet to come.
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| c. 1912, Sister Meda with campaign hat & flag |
Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy




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