Cantonment Wright
Cantonment Wright (1861-1862) - A U.S. Civil War era Camp established by 1st Lieutenant John Mullan, (Cullum 1550), in 1861 near present day Milltown, Missoula County, Montana. Named Cantonment Wright after General George Wright. Abandoned in 1862. History of Cantonment WrightEstablished by 1st Lieutenant John Mullan in 1861 as a camp built during the construction of the 624-mile Mullen Wagon Road between Fort Benton, Montana and Fort Walla Walla, Washington. The cantonment had six crude log cabins from which Mullen and his men built a two hundred and thirty-five foot long log bridge with four spans across the nearby Blackfoot River. The camp was located near a trading post established by Frank Worden and Christopher Higgins in 1860 that became known as Hell Gate. The bridge survived for only a couple years before high water destroyed it. Mullen abandoned the cantonment on 23 May 1862 and departed for Fort Benton. Current StatusMarker and statue located on Montana route MT-2000 at Exit 109 of Interstate 90 near Milltown.
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