Charles M. Bair
Sheep Rancher
Revised 20 June 2001c
Charles Bair was born on June 18,
1857 in Ohio. He started farming in Michigan; then became a train conductor for
the railroad. He came to Montana in 1883 and
was a conductor on the Billings to Helena run with the
Northern Pacific for eight years. He
saved his money and invested in ranch land. By 1891, he was ready to devote
full time to ranching. In 1898, he became one of the area’s largest and
most successful stockman. He sold 25,000 sheep and
some ranch holdings to purchase ground-thawing machines, which he took to the
placer gold mines of the Klondike with Louis
E. Miller. The machines worked perfectly, and he invested his earnings in rich
Alaskan mining properties. He returned to Montana in 1899 and again invested in sheep.
At one time he clipped 1,900,000 pounds of wool. By
the turn of the century he owned the largest
individual sheep operation in the northwest U.S. Bair ran as many as 300,000
head of sheep on his ranch in the Martindale area and other lease land. In
1910, his sheep sale filled a 47-car train with 1.5 million pounds of wool
bound for the Boston
market.
He built a home at Broadway & 3rd
Ave N in Billings.
It was considered the finest in Billings. His family
farm home is a museum, and is open to the public. When the last of the
family, Alberta died in 1993, the Bair Family
Trust contracted with the C.M. Russell Museum of Great Falls to manage the ranch house as a
public museum.
Email
me:
Katy Hestand
Yellowstone County Coordinator