Clark Chateau Museum:




Chateau's piano

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THE CHARLES W. CLARK CHATEAU


May – September

Sunday – Saturday: 12 p.m. –5 p.m.

Tours are offered during the winter by appointment only.
321 W. Broadway
Butte, MT 59701
406–723–7600

This twenty–six room, four–story house was built at the turn of the century by Charles Clark, oldest son of W. A. Clark, a copper king. Construction began in the summer of 1898, after Will Aldrich, architect, applied for a building permit July 15, 1898. Charles and Katherine Roberts of Butte had been married in 1896, three years after Charles graduated from Yale, and they went to Europe on their honeymoon. On July 5, 1898, the Butte Daily Miner, Butte's oldest newspaper, then owned by W. A. Clark, reported their return from European capitals; on July 17 The Miner stated the young couple would erect this residence at Washington and Broadway. They were living at W. A. Clark's mansion on Granite at the time.


According to legends, this building was a French chateau they saw on their honeymoon, had dismantled, shipped, and reassembled here. In 1900, Sears–Roebuck offered as many as 100 house plans of pre–cut homes to be assembled by numbered parts; this could have sparked the legend. Another story had the Chateau patterned after a wing of a chateau in France which the Clarks loved and had built on a scale one–seventh the original size. The latter seems more likely since the plain east side, abutting the next residence, gives the appearance of having been cut off from a larger edifice.


In 1898, Charles organized the committee to elect his father to the U.S. Senate from Montana; Charles served as treasurer of that committee. Since Montana elected its senators in the state legislative assembly at that time, it was not until the eighteenth ballot, through political ploys and shenanigans, that W. A. Clark was finally elected in February, 1899, by the Sixth Legislative Assembly. His son was taken to court. In 1901, Charles established his legal residence in California, and on September 26, 1901, he deeded his home shortly after its completion to his wife, listing the consideration as "love and affection". Judgments, mechanics' liens, and attachments were filed on this property against Charles Clark. Katherine died in New York on January 27, 1904, when Charles was thirty–two; eventually the property was sold as part of her estate. In the meantime, her father–in–law, U.S. Senator from Montana in 1900–1906, for one term, may have used his son's unoccupied home in which to entertain and house out–of–town guests as it was just two blocks from his own mansion. W. A. Clark's multi–millions and his art collection attracted both protagonists and Tartuffes.


As heirs to Katherine's estate, Katherine's parents, George and Emily Roberts, deeded the property April 18, 1904, to Alexander Johnston, administrator, who in turn, on March 12, 1906, deeded it to Patrick and Margaret Wall. On September 24, 1908, the Chateau was deeded by the Walls to E. Creighton Largey. Creighton was a multi–millionaire's son, he inherited one–quarter of his father's estate, his father was Patrick A. Largey a prominent banker of Butte.


The architect of this building, Will Aldrich, was from Boston, having graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1884. After traveling in Europe, he lived in Butte in 1898–1900 at 132 West Granite during the building of the Chateau, then returned to Boston to work for the firm Peabody and Sterns. From there he moved to New York to join McKim, Mead, and White. In 1910 he went to St. Joseph, Missouri, where he joined in the partnership of Echel and Aldrich, a firm which subsequently designed many notable buildings in that state.


According to Goddard in "Butte Old Timers Handbook," it was at a gala party in the midst "of the Panic of 1907" in the Chateau that Joe Howard sat at the piano and spontaneously composed "Montana", the state song. Howard and Julia MacIntyre, close friends of the Largeys who where there, recalled the conviviality and the contributions of words by the guests for the lyrics. Hostess of the $15,000 costume ball was Ursula Largey, who had a flair for the stage. Three hundred quests enjoyed a salad supper at 1:00 a.m. and breakfast at 4:30 a.m.. Fancy dress parties were in vogue; they danced to the music of two bands. Butte citizens lined Broadway to watch the guests arrive in carriages. F. Augustus Heinze arrived as Napoleon.


In 1913, May Murray, claimed the Largeys left the building unoccupied and hadn't paid on a promissory note. The building was vandalized and small fires set within. James E. Murray, her brother, decreed an auction of the home to foreclose on the mortgaged note. May Murray bought the Chateau at a sheriff's sale on the courthouse steps in August, 1915, having been deeded the surface rights five months earlier from the Largeys. She transferred ownership to Monidah Trust – a personal holding company of which James A. Murray, her uncle, was president.


During the ensuing years, the Chateau was rented out as a music conservatory and as five individual apartments. The trap door above the second floor stairwell was cut in the ceiling to accommodate the hoisting of a piano to the ballroom. For thirty years from 1915 to 1945, the house remained in the Murray family.


Senator Murray and his wife, nee Viola Horgan, and their six sons resided here until he was elected to the U.S. Senate and they moved to Washington, D.C. In the beginning their youngest was six years old, and the older boys moved in and out as they pursued their education in eastern colleges. The third floor was their dormitory with four small bedrooms, the ballroom area being reserved for the two oldest brothers. Some young guests remember riding to the dormitory in the dumbwaiter! Prominent house guests had the rooms next to the owner's on the second floor, and had breakfast and lunches in the room off the kitchen.


Not to be excluded is a real fairy tale about this Chateau. Multi–millionaire Patrick A. Largey's granddaughter, the girl next door and across the street, Lou MacDonald, married one of Senator Murray's sons, Judge W. D. Murray, in 1938. Numerous pre–nuptial parties and dinners were held in their honor in the Chateau. Two years later the couple moved into the Chateau when the Judge was Assistant U.S. Attorney.


Mrs. W. D. Murray amusingly recalled her life for three years in the Chateau as a young mother and homemaker. With no household help, she cleaned one floor at a time on a rotating schedule. She got her exercise answering the front door bell, and in winter used a portable heater in the kitchen to keep from having to heat all the rooms. World War II began and the Murrays moved away. Thus ended the long and colorful Murray era as the furniture was divided among the sons and put in storage. The W. D. Murrays still have the dining room furniture and two fireplace chairs. The Judge recalled that upon his return from the Navy as legal counsel for an admiral, his father offered him the Chateau as a gift – but, with no endowment for maintenance.


So on March 26, 1945, James E. and Viola E. Murray sold the Chateau to Leslie and Fay Waite, who deeded it on November 21, 1949, to the Fez Club, a Shriner social organization. The Waites furnished the lower floors tastefully. The crystal chandeliers in the dining room date from their ownership.


In 1976, the Butte–Silver Bow Bi–centennial Commission purchased the original Charlie Clark home from the Fez Club for the citizens of Butte to use as a cultural center. For over seventy–five years most residents of Butte looked upon the Chateau as a mysterious place. Now it is owned by the people of Butte, the doors are open, and the mystery cleared. The Chateau is now operated by the Butte Silver–Bow Arts Foundation.


For more information on the Charles W. Clark Chateau Click Here


All information was taken from:
"The Butte Arts Chateau Chronicle and Conjecture" by Vernetta R. Kommers (1977)

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