Preston B. Moss – Billings Businessman
[Note: The biographies of Mr Moss and his land developments are available; but not yet published.]
Revised 20 June 2001c
Preston Moss was a lumberyard owner
and banker in Missouri before arriving in Billings in 1892, with
his bride. He took over the First National Bank in December of that year, and
during the panic of 1893 discovered that the previous bank managers had
invested most of its assets in sheep. The price of sheep fell to 50 cents on
the dollar, the bank’s assets dropped even faster. All bank obligations were liquidated, down to $150 in reserves. The bank didn’t even have a $5 bill.
He helped recover the assets, and soon became one of Billings leading
citizens, and biggest investor. In 1894 he built his
25-room home at 914 Division
Street (later re-addressed as 216 Division Street). Currently it is managed as a historical site. He and Col. Henry W. Rowley
built the original Northern Hotel in 1903. After Rowley’s death in 1930 he and Mrs. Rowley managed it together. In 1940, when
the hotel burned down on September 11th, he
was president of the Billings Investment Company, and immediately made plans to
replace it. The structure cost $1,000,000 at the time, and even with wartime
shortages, it was built in record time, and opened on July 7,
1942. Moss was 79 at the time.
Moss owned the Billings Gazette from 1908 to 1914. In 1914
he started the Billings Utility Company, and in 1937 he sold that business to
the Billings Gas Company. It provided heat to businesses and residences from its
North 29th Street
location. He is considered to be the father of the
city’s first telephone system, which boasted the first automatic system
in Montana.
The Huntley Irrigation System was built largely
because of a team of business leaders, I. D. O’Donnell, M. A. Arnold and
Mr. Moss. Moss also assisted in the start of the Billings Polytechnic Institute
(Rocky Mountain College),
and contributed to the formation of the YMCA. He planned a futuristic
community, “Mossmain,” a short distance
east of Laurel where the rail lines of NPR,
Great Northern and Burlington
merged, but the venture failed.
He was a political independent, and spent his free time with personal
interests in the Masonry.
Email
me:
Katy Hestand
Yellowstone County Coordinator