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The Missouri River near Great Falls drops 500 feet in 21 miles. The five waterfalls in the river canyon forced an arduous portage of the Lewis & Clark Expedition nearly 200 years ago. Decades later though these same conditions provided opportunities for a fledgling hydro-power industry and by the late 1880s hydro-electric power was being generated near Black Eagle Falls. A silver smelter and the giant Anaconda Company Refinery were sited neat this abundant power source and were linked by a number of railroads to the rest of the nation. As the appetite for power increased, new dams and powerhouses were built at Rainbow, (1910), Ryan (1915), Morony (1928), and Cochrane (1958).
Cochrane Dam under construction in 1958 Rivers Edge Trail in the fall of 1989 A conceptual plan for a riverside recreational trail in Great Falls was developed by the City-County Planning Board staff in 1989. Dubbed the Riverfront Recreational Corridor, the trail was to extend 7 miles from the Broadwater Bay area downstream to Rainbow Falls. The trail, re-named the Rivers Edge Trail following a Name-the-Trail contest in the Great Falls Tribune, captured the interest and support of the community. A volunteer group that advocated local bike trails, also in 1989, as part of the Vision 2000 community planning process, began working with the City to develop the first segments of the trail. That group was formalized as a non-profit 501 c3 corporation named Recreational Trails, Inc. (RTI). 1914 Milwaukee (now Weissman) Bridge. Volunteers contemplate the site of first bridge needed for the trail, |
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