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Kootenai divided into 'Old Town,' 'New Town'

by Bob Gunter
| April 18, 2010 9:00 PM

     (Recently, I received a phone call from a new-comer in town wanting to know if I could give him some information about Koo-tenai. I recalled a story Bev Wiley once told me that had been given to her by Thelma Linstrum back in the 1980s. Today, Thelma tells in her own words about her early days in Kootenai. I hope you will find it inter-esting — I did.)

     “My parents, Charles and Ada Hilligoss came from Minnesota in July of 1902. The dray tak-ing them from the old Great Northern depot to Kootenai (called Greenough’s Spur) was hub-deep in mud on the narrow road going through the thickly for-ested countryside.

     “The Ellersick broth-ers, who came from Park Rapids, Minn., in 1901, were building the Kootenai Mill and the mill houses near present-day Ponder Point. The next day my father went to work for them, using a horse to drag timber to the mill.

     “Several years later, the mill was sold to the Humbird Lumber Company from Mason, Wis. My father continued working for Humbird until the mill closed in 1930. During those years, he was a timekeeper and office manager.

     “He and my mother also operated the com-pany boarding house for several years.

     “My sister, Lila (Mrs. Arthur Rosholt), my brother, Adair Hilligoss, and I were born in Kootenai. Our parents later purchased a mill house there.

     “During those years, there were many changes in the area generated by the lumber and railroad industries. There became two Kootenais.

     “The first, called Old Town was at the mill location. It included the mill office, the houses, the Ellersick homes, a boarding house, a com-pany store and a railroad spur — all south of the railroad tracks.

     “When the Northern Pacific Railroad relocated its division point from Hope to Kootenai, the Humbirds, who owned much of the adjoining land, established the Kootenai town site, New Town, on the north side of the tracks.

     “They platted the town and built many houses, which were rented or sold to the railroad work-ers. Soon there were so many buildings, both business and residential, that it took nearly five miles of wooden side-walks to connect the com-munity.

     “To this day, the terms ‘Old Town’ and ‘New Town’ still apply to Kootenai.

     “I can remember when there were stores on each side of the street for more than two blocks in New Town.

     “There were two drug stores, and the butcher shop was the ticket office and terminal for the streetcar coming from Sandpoint. There was a restaurant, a hardware store, and a furniture store.

     “The Bonner Trading Store selling general mer-chandise housed the post office.

     “At one time, there was a dance hall and seven saloons in town. The Painter Hotel, built a little later, was next to the bank owned by the Humbird Lumber Company. A little square building, which was the jail later, became the post office. Some of the build-ings had living quarters upstairs and many had tall fronts with advertis-ing on them. At that time, it was thought that Kootenai was larger than Sandpoint.

     “The railroad facili-ties grew rapidly. All the freight trains, going both ways, stopped and changed crews and so many railroad families lived in town.

     “There was a large brick 22 stall roundhouse, a coal dock, and a large building called the car shop; also a large stock-yard where cattle and sheep were unloaded from the stock cars to be fed, watered and reloaded.

     “Most of this was between Kootenai and Ponderay and was called Kootenai Yard. Beyond Ponderay were many tracks, running parallel to one another, perhaps seven. These were used for making up the freight trains.

     “There was also a very tall smokestack in the area that was part of a smelter. Though the smelter did not operate very long, the smoke-stack stood for many years.”