Source Information

Sewell, Patricia, comp. Butte, Silver Bow County, Montana, Directory, 1902 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001.
Original data: R.L. Polk & Counties Butte City Directory 1902. Records extracted from the Butte, Silver Bow County Directory, 1902 at the University of Montana, Mansfield Library Special Collections in Missoula, Montana, 1902.

About Butte, Silver Bow County, Montana, Directory, 1902

Located in western Montana, the city of Butte is the county seat of Silver Bow County. In the early twentieth century, Butte was a thriving mining metropolis. This database is a transcription of a city directory originally published in 1902. In addition to providing the residents' names, it provides their addresses and occupational information. The database includes more than 28,000 names, mostly heads of household. This database will be found useful by those who are researching their ancestors in Western Montana and Montana history researchers.

City directories are primarily useful for locating people in a particular place and time. They can tell you generally where an ancestor lived and give an exact location for census years. They are also useful for linkage with sources other than censuses.

There are usually several parts to a city directory. The section of most interest to the genealogist, of course, is the alphabetical listing of names, for it is there that you may find your ancestor.

Whenever you use a directory, however, it is important to refer to the page showing abbreviations used in the alphabetical section of the directory, usually following the name in each entry. Some abbreviations are quite common, such as h for home or r, indicating residence. There may even be a subtle distinction between r for residents who are related to the homeowner and b for boarders who are not related.

Some city directories list adult children who lived with their parents but were working or going to school. Look for persons of the same surname residing at the same address. If analyzed and interpreted properly, these annual directories can tell you (by implication) which children belong to which household, when they married and started families of their own, and when they established themselves in business. In cases where specific occupation is given, you can search records pertinent to that occupation.

Once an ancestor has been found in a city directory, there are several ways the information can be used to gain access to, or link with, such sources as censuses, death and probate records, church records, naturalization records, and land records.

Taken from Chapter 11: Research in Directories, The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy by Gordon Lewis Remington; edited by Loretto Dennis Szucs and Sandra Hargreaves Luebking (Salt Lake City, UT: Ancestry Incorporated, 1997).