Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
VI. NORTHERN SECTION
From Livingston to the North Entrance
William Clark, of the 1803-6 Lewis and Clark expedition, passed the Great Bend of the Yel-
lowstone at present-day Livingston on his return from the Pacific coast, thereby totally miss-
ing present park territory. But most visitors to the area later in the nineteenth and in the early
twentieth centuries came this way, traveling upstream along the Yellowstone River.
The 54 miles (87 km) from Livingston to Gardiner traverse mountain-bound Paradise Val-
ley, with its irrigated fields, horse and cattle ranches, ranchettes, and winter and summer re-
creation. The area abounds in both private campgrounds and public ones managed by U.S.
and Montana agencies. Fishing is immensely popular in the Yellowstone River and its tributar-
ies. Numerous hiking or horseback trails lead into the surrounding mountains and wilderness
areas.
L IVINGSTON , M ONTANA A IRPORT: M ISSION F IELD
Population: 7,050 6 mi. (9 km) E
The town of Livingston, probably named for railroad director Johnston Livingston, was first
settled in 1882, when the tracks of the Northern Pacific Railway reached this point along the
Yellowstone River. Visitors to the new national park would change trains here for Cinnabar
(and later for Gardiner, even closer to the park). Then they would connect with stagecoaches to
take them through the North Entrance and on for the Grand Tour. Although passenger service
has ceased, Livingston is still important as a railroad freight hub.
Livingston is a tourist, ranching, and art center with numerous nineteenth-century build-
ings listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including a classic railroad depot. The
Park County Museum contains a wealth of memorabilia pertaining to Yellowstone Park and to
the environs of Livingston. Two 1990s movies, A River Runs through It and The Horse Whisper-
er, were partially filmed in and around the town.
Livingston is also well-known for its wind. The town's location east of the Rocky Mountains
and north of the Yellowstone Plateau assures that it gets more wind than any other Yellowstone
gateway. It's a blessing when the wind is the winter chinook from the mountains, sometimes
warm and dry enough in midwinter to melt all the snow.
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