Butte, Montana, USA
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In Today's Daily Jigsaw Puzzle, we visit Butte, Montana, USA.
Butte is built on grit, copper, and a rebellious spirit. Once known as the "Richest Hill on Earth," it fueled the Industrial Revolution with its vast copper mines, attracting a melting pot of immigrants—predominantly Irish, Chinese, Cornish, and Finnish—who shaped its rough-and-tumble identity.
Beneath its streets lies a labyrinth of abandoned tunnels from its mining days, adding to local legends of ghostly echoes from the past.
Butte's red-light district was once one of the largest in the West, with the Dumas Brothel operating from 1890 to 1982, making it one of the longest-running bordellos in the U.S. Today, it stands as a museum, preserving its salacious history. Meanwhile, Evel Knievel, the world-famous daredevil, was born here in 1938, leaving behind a legacy of ambition and risk-taking. The city even hosted the annual Evel Knievel Days festival for years.
The Berkeley Pit, a former open-pit copper mine, has since become an eerie, toxic lake. But within its acidic waters, extremophile microorganisms thrive—organisms that scientists study for potential medical breakthroughs, including antibiotic and cancer research.
At its peak in 1920, Butte had more than 60,000 residents, but as mining declined, so did its population. Today, it hovers around 34,500 ♥
Butte is built on grit, copper, and a rebellious spirit. Once known as the "Richest Hill on Earth," it fueled the Industrial Revolution with its vast copper mines, attracting a melting pot of immigrants—predominantly Irish, Chinese, Cornish, and Finnish—who shaped its rough-and-tumble identity.
Beneath its streets lies a labyrinth of abandoned tunnels from its mining days, adding to local legends of ghostly echoes from the past.
Butte's red-light district was once one of the largest in the West, with the Dumas Brothel operating from 1890 to 1982, making it one of the longest-running bordellos in the U.S. Today, it stands as a museum, preserving its salacious history. Meanwhile, Evel Knievel, the world-famous daredevil, was born here in 1938, leaving behind a legacy of ambition and risk-taking. The city even hosted the annual Evel Knievel Days festival for years.
The Berkeley Pit, a former open-pit copper mine, has since become an eerie, toxic lake. But within its acidic waters, extremophile microorganisms thrive—organisms that scientists study for potential medical breakthroughs, including antibiotic and cancer research.
At its peak in 1920, Butte had more than 60,000 residents, but as mining declined, so did its population. Today, it hovers around 34,500 ♥
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