In the aftermath of this year's election, a group of left-leaning Missoula residents donned signs urging empathy to make a statement, one that strives for unity rather than political division.
Robert Kinney is just one of several thousand veterans scattered across the city, and like each of them, he has his own stories to tell; he also has friends who died in service to remember.
Nearly 83,000 Missoula County residents are registered to vote, and nearly 40,000 of them had submitted an absentee ballot by Monday's deadline in this year's election.
Jeannette Rankin, of Missoula, became the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress 100 years ago; another historic first for women could also play out on Election Day.
Law enforcement linked Nance to five murders in the 1970s and 80s, including the double homicide of Michael and Teresa Shook, during which Nance attempted to burn down their house.
Crow tribal members protested in front of the Billings office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs this week, asking for a say on decisions being made by governing branches of the Crow Nation.
Rumors began circulating in 1894 that things weren't alright in the Walter household; the judge had left his wife and four children in destitute condition without food, clothing or warmth.
Volunteers with Forward Montana break out the “vote goats” at UM and encourage students to fill out their ballots, saying this year's election could effectively determine their future.
Grace Brewer fulfilled her mother's wish by signing a conservation easement that protects the Wisherd-Blackfoot Canyon Conservation Easement in perpetuity.
The public is invited to join Leslie Van Stavern Millar II for the Missoula Art Museum’s First Friday reception of her current exhibit, Montana Peepshow Stories, on Nov. 4 from 5-8 p.m