Photo detail

Camera Maker Canon Camera Model Canon PowerShot G5
Aperture f/4 Color Space sRGB
Exposure Value 0 EV Exposure Time 1/160 sec
Flash No Flash Focal Length 8 mm
Date/Time 2005:08:16 11:02:58 Copyright © 2005 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved.
Orientation 1: Normal (0 deg) Resolution Unit Inch
X Resolution 72 dots per ResolutionUnit Y Resolution 72 dots per ResolutionUnit
Compression Jpeg Compression Exposure Mode 0
Keywords historic marker Old Agency John Young marker attraction display education historical marker Historical Site information landmark Place of Interest sign Tourist Destination Travel Destination Montana attractive destination educating historic markers historic site info signage tourist attraction West appealing history no people text tourism travel United States attract historic nobody word daytime displays historical markers landmarks markers signs United States of America appeal color image educate historical outdoor vertical day destinations historic sites tourist attractions colour image outside day time MT day-time US words color images daylight outdoors Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org USA verticals colour images natural light outsides U.S. U.S.A. Caption OLD AGENCY 1880-1894 The second Indian Agency on the Blackfeet Reservation was built at Old Agency in 1879. Agent John Young moved the buildings from Upper Badger Creek with help from the Blackfeet Indians. Both men and women dug cellars, hauled stone and mixed mortar. The women covered the exterior with lime from Heart Butte. Built in stockade shape, the Agency had two bastions at diagonal corners to protect against enemy attack. The Indians called it "Old Ration Place" after the government began issuing rations. The "Starvation Winter" of 1883-1884 took the lives of about 500 Blackfeet Indians who had been camping in the vicinity of Old Agency. This tragic event was the result of inadequate supply of government rations during an exceptionally hard winter. In 1894, after the Great Northern Railway had extended its tracks across the Reservation, the Agency moved to Willow Creek at the present site in Browning. Today, the Museum of the Plains Indian in Browning houses a fine collection of artifacts that illustrate Blackfeet culture before and after the establishment of the Reservation.