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Freeman A. Halverson, a son of Norwegian immigrants was born in
Barron County, Wisconsin in 1889 near the town of Dallas. His
mother died when he was barely a year old, and he was taken in and
raised by close relatives. At the age of 21 years he, along with
his cousin Fred, decided to see the world, so they trekked west on
the Great Northern Railroad to a place called Kalispell, Montana.
Having the youthful wide-eyed intentions of venturing to Alaska,
the Far East or other far-off worldly places, the two young men,
instead, ended up homesteading in Montana, where the territory was
open range and dominated by Native Americans, large cattle ranches,
mining, and forest logging operations. After a lifetime in the
Little Bitter Root Valley of "Big Sky Country," and retiring fifty
years after arriving there, Freeman took pen in hand with a
typewriter at his side, and wrote his memoirs. A Man From Montana
is rich in the tales of adventure, fortitude and endurance which
westward bound young men and women experienced during that time.
Freeman and Fred started out life with absolutely nothing but a few
dollars in their pockets and a spirit of adventure.
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