54 Best Sights in Kalispell, Missoula, and Northwest Montana, Montana

Ninepipe National Wildlife Refuge

Sprawling Ninepipe National Wildlife Refuge is the place for birdwatchers. This 2,000-acre wetland complex in the shadow of the Mission Mountains is home to everything from marsh hawks to kestrels to red-winged blackbirds. Flanking both sides of U.S. 93 are rookeries for double-crested cormorants and great blue herons; bald eagles fish here in the winter. Roads (including U.S. 93, where stopping is prohibited within the boundaries) through the center of the refuge are closed March through mid-July during nesting season, but you can drive along the periphery throughout the year. Maps are available from the nearby National Bison Range, which manages Ninepipe.

58355 Bison Range Rd., Flathead Reservation, Montana, 59824, USA
406-644–2211

North Fork Road

Enter Glacier National Park through the back door by driving the North Fork Road. It's a rutted, bumpy, dusty gravel road that's teeming with wildlife along the North Fork of the Flathead River. The 40 miles to the Polebridge entrance station passes through thick forests, some of which burned during fires of 2001 and 2003. As a result, many of these areas become seas of purple fireweed in early summer. You can opt out early and enter Glacier at the Camas Creek entrance gate and avoid rough roads. If you make it all the way to Polebridge, stop at the Mercantile for lunch or one of their famous huckleberry bear claws.

Northern Pacific Railroad Depot

The construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad was instrumental in opening up the West to settlers, and the arrival of the line in Missoula is a key point in the city's history. The depot, opened in 1901, is an example of the Renaissance Revival architecture that dominates the north end of downtown. Today, the depot houses private offices, but you can still look around inside, enjoy a picnic outside, and examine the Crossings, a sculpture of giant red enamel Xs representing railroad trestles over mountain ravines.

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Northwest Montana History Museum

You can ring the old school bell at the Northwest Montana History Museum, housed in the Central School building that served as the educational backdrop for students of the Flathead Valley for nearly 100 years. The museum hosts galleries, activities, and displays about regional heritage and history, including local Native American culture. You'll also find a café, a museum store, conference rooms, and a reference library.

124 2nd Ave. E, Kalispell, Montana, 59901, USA
406-756–8381
sights Details
Rate Includes: $5, Closed weekends, June–Sept., Mon.–Sat. 10–5; Oct.–May, weekdays 10–5

Old Milwaukee Railroad Depot

A Missoula landmark along the river's south shore, this 1910 passenger depot, with Romanesque windows, a Spanish-style roof, two towers, and Mission-style parapet walls, is on the National Register of Historic Places. It's now the national headquarters of the Boone and Crockett Club, an organization founded in 1887 by Theodore Roosevelt to establish conservation of wild habitats. Open to the public is a display of a world-record taxidermied elk, bighorn sheep, and other wildlife.

People's Square

If you happen to forget which country Kashgar is in, chances are you aren't standing in this square. A statue of Mao Zedong—one of the largest in China—stands with his back to Kashgar's Old City and his right arm raised in perpetual salute. The statue is evidence of an unspoken rule in China that directly relates the size of a Mao tribute to its distance from Beijing; the only Mao statue larger than this one is in Tibet.

Renmin Lu, Kashgar, Xinjiang Uygur Zizhiqu, 844000, China
No phone

Polson

Polson, a quiet community of 4,000 on the southwest corner of Flathead Lake, sits under the morning shadow of the jagged Mission Mountains. It's the largest town on the Flathead Indian Reservation. Picnic spots, lake access, and playgrounds are found at Boettcher, Sacajawea, and Riverside parks. Some other parks are for tribal members only; signs identify picnic areas that are closed to the public. Plan on attending the two-day Flathead Cherry Festival in mid-July to get your fill of the area's famous cherries.

Ravalli County Museum

The Ravalli County Museum, in the former courthouse, contains exhibits on natural history, fly-fishing, Native Americans, Lewis and Clark, and other subjects related to the region. During the Saturday Series (most Saturdays 2 pm, $5), speakers share local history and lore.

205 Bedford St., Hamilton, Montana, 59840, USA
406-363–3338
sights Details
Rate Includes: $3, Closed Sun.–Tues., Tues.–Fri. 10–4, Sat. 9–1.

Riverfront Trail

The heart of Missoula is defined by the Clark Fork River, which cuts through Hellgate Canyon between Mount Sentinel and Mount Jumbo, passes by the university, and slices through downtown. A 6-mile-long riverside trail (as well as the connecting 2½-mile Kim Williams Trail) makes for easy, pleasant walks, with picnic spots and benches along the way where you can watch the river. Look down from Higgin's Bridge and watch the surfers, kayakers and paddleboarders lay on Brennan's Wave. Take note: the powerful currents of the Clark Fork are dangerous—they've taken many lives over the years.

Missoula, Montana, USA

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Wildlife Visitor Center

The visitor center features natural-history displays (including hands-on displays for kids), films, art, taxidermied animals, a world-record pair of elk antlers, and an outdoor nature trail. The foundation works to preserve wild lands for elk and other wildlife; since 1984 the nonprofit organization has saved almost 8 million acres from development.

5705 Grant Creek Rd., Missoula, Montana, 59808, USA
406-523–4500
sights Details
Rate Includes: Donations accepted, Jan. 1–Memorial Day, weekdays 8–5, Sat. 10–5; Memorial Day–Dec. 30, weekdays 8–6, weekends 9–6

Seeley Lake Museum and Visitors Center

Logging's colorful past is displayed in the big log barn at Seeley Lake Museum and Visitors Center, along with tools of the trade and visitor information.

2920 Hwy. 83 S, Seeley Lake, Montana, 59868, USA
406-677–2990
sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Labor Day--Memorial Day, Memorial Day–Labor Day, daily 9–5; Labor Day–Memorial Day, Mon., Thurs., and Fri. 11–4

Selway-Bitterroot National Forest

Hamilton, like Stevensville and Darby, is on the doorstep of the 1.3-million-acre Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness Area and is not far from the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness Area to the east. Hundreds of miles of trails wend through the forests, where visitors may encounter bears, elk, moose, deer, and bighorn sheep. There are also songbirds and birds of prey such as eagles and owls.

Skalkaho Highway

Three miles south of Hamilton, turn east onto Route 38, also known as the Skalkaho Highway, and you'll find yourself on a beautiful route leading into the Sapphire Mountains and on to Philipsburg and the Georgetown Lake area. This fair-weather road is best traveled in summer, since 20 miles of it are gravel. Mountain bikers tour here, and there are plenty of hiking trails through the 23,000-acre Skalkaho Wildlife Preserve. Note that trailers are not recommended. Forest Road 1352 into the preserve is closed October 15 to December 1, making that a fine time for nonmotorized travel. Only 10 miles of the Skalkaho Highway are plowed in winter, which means the area is excellent for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing.

Smokejumper Visitor Center

A replica 1930s lookout tower, fire photos, videos, and murals explain wildland fire ecology and behavior, fire-fighting technique, and the nation's history of smoke jumping, which began here in 1942. Today it's the largest smoke-jumper base in the nation. From Memorial Day through Labor Day the center offers five tours daily, given by guides who provide firsthand accounts of jumping into blazing forests.

5765 W. Broadway, Missoula, Montana, 59808, USA
406-329–4934
sights Details
Rate Includes: Donations accepted, Memorial Day–Labor Day, weekdays 8:30–5; Labor Day–Memorial Day by appointment; summer tours on the hr 10–11 and 2–4

Spotted Bear

At the end of a long and often washboarded gravel road, Spotted Bear is a remote entrance into the Bob Marshall Wilderness. You'll find there a ranger station, outfitter's ranch, campground, swimming, and rafting a short distance down the South Fork of the Flathead River to the Hungry Horse Reservoir.

East Side Reservoir Rd. #38, Montana, 59919, USA
406-387–3800
sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Apr.–Oct.

St. Ignatius Mission

The St. Ignatius Mission—a church, cabin, and collection of other buildings—was built in the 1890s with bricks made of local clay by missionaries and Native Americans. The 61 murals on the walls and ceilings of the church were used to teach Bible stories to the Indians. In the St. Ignatius Mission Museum (an old log cabin) there's an exhibit of early artifacts and arts and crafts. The mission is still a functioning church; Mass is offered every Sunday morning in the rectory. To reach the mission from St. Ignatius, take Main Street south to Mission Drive.

300 Bear Track Ave., Flathead Reservation, Montana, 59865, USA
406-745–2768
sights Details
Rate Includes: Memorial Day–Labor Day, daily 9–7; Labor Day–Memorial Day, daily 9–5

St. Mary's Mission

St. Mary's Mission, established by Father Pierre DeSmet in 1841, was the first Catholic mission in the Northwest and the site of the first permanent non–Native American settlement in Montana. The site is run by a nonsectarian, nonprofit organization that encourages tour groups, school groups, and individuals to explore the home of Father Anthony Ravalli, an Italian priest recruited to the mission by Father DeSmet in 1845. Ravalli was also Montana's first physician and pharmacist. On the site are a photogenic chapel, a priest's quarters, a pharmacy, Father Ravalli's log house, and the cabin of Chief Victor, a Salish Indian who refused to sign the Hell Gate Treaty and move his people onto the Flathead Reservation. A burial plot has headstones bearing the names of both Native Americans and white settlers.

315 Charlos St., Stevensville, Montana, 59870, USA
406-777–5734
sights Details
Rate Includes: $7, Closed Sun. and Mon., Mid-Apr.–mid-Oct., daily 10–4

Stevensville Museum

Historical artifacts in the Stevensville Museum include the belongings of early settlers, particularly the missionaries who came to convert the Native Americans of the West. Other exhibits provide an overview of the area's original cultures (Salish, Nez Perce, and Lemhi Shoshone), background on Lewis and Clark's two visits, and a look at later residents, from orchard farmers to today's cybercommuters.

517 Main St., Stevensville, Montana, 5987, USA
406-777–1007
sights Details
Rate Includes: Donations accepted, Closed Mon.--Wed., Memorial Day–Labor Day, Thurs.–Sat. 11–4, Sun. 1–4

Stumptown Historical Society's Museum

If you want to check out a cross section of American life, drop by the Whitefish train station at 6 am as a sleepy collection of farmers, cowboys, and skiers awaits the arrival of Amtrak's Empire Builder, en route from Seattle to Chicago. Inside the half-timber depot is the Stumptown Historical Society's Whitefish Museum. The focus here is the Great Northern Railway, the nation's first unsubsidized transcontinental railway that passed through Whitefish. On display are lanterns, old posters, and crockery, as well as reminders of local history, such as the books of author Dorothy M. Johnson and photos of the Whitefish football team from 1922 through 1954, plus some real fun (look for the fur-covered trout). You can pick up a walking-tour map of Whitefish's historic district here.

Symes Hot Springs Hotel and Mineral Baths

Truly a unique find on the western edge of the Flathead Indian Reservation, this rustic 1928 hotel has hot mineral pools from continuously flowing springs, spa treatments, massage, and live music on weekends. In the restaurant, steak, seafood, and pasta satisfy hungry soakers. The hotel itself isn't a standout, though the rates are reasonable. Several historic hot springs in the area attracted Native Americans for centuries.

209 Wall St., Hot Springs, Montana, 59845, USA
406-741–2361
sights Details
Rate Includes: Pools and baths $10, Credit cards accepted, Sun.–Thurs. 7 am–10:15 pm Fri. and Sat. 7 am–midnight.

Teller Wildlife Refuge

A refreshing stop for wildlife viewing, this 1,300-acre wildlife conservation property is intended to inspire, educate, and demonstrate conservation in action. Situated along 3 miles of the Bitterroot River, about 8 miles north of Hamilton, the refuge is home to otters, beavers, spotted frogs, and salamanders, as well as pileated woodpeckers, birds of prey, waterfowl, whitetail deer, and many native plants. Although most of the refuge is off-limits to the public (except by appointment), any visitors can take a stroll on the 1.5-mile walking trail along the Bitterroot River. An education center conducts numerous conservation programs for the public. To get here, take Route 269 (Eastside Highway) to Quast Lane and follow the signs.

Three Chiefs Culture Center

The center (formerly The People's Center) allows you to experience the rich cultural heritage of the Salish, Kootenai, and Pend d'Oreille people. The People's Center includes artifacts, photographs, and recordings, runs educational programs, and includes guided interpretive tours, outdoor traditional lodges, and annual festivals. A gift shop sells both traditional and nontraditional work by local artists and craftspeople.

53253 U.S. 93 W, Pablo, Montana, 59855, USA
406-675–0160
sights Details
Rate Includes: $5, Closed weekends, Memorial Day–Labor Day, Mon.–Sat. 9–5; Labor Day–Memorial Day, weekdays 9–5

Traveler's Rest State Park

This park includes a Lewis and Clark camp on a floodplain overlooking Lolo Creek. The explorers stayed here from September 9 to 11, 1805, and again from June 30 to July 3, 1806. Archaeologists in 2002 found evidence of a latrine and a fire hearth, making this one of only a few locations with a physical record of the expedition's camp. Tepee rings suggest that Native Americans used the riverside location, too. Self-guided tours meander through cottonwoods and the historic campsite. Daily interpretive presentations and guided tours run during the summer.

6717 U.S.-12, Lolo, Montana, 59847, USA
406-273–4253
sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Memorial Day weekend–Labor Day, daily 8–8; Labor Day–Memorial Day weekend, weekdays 9–4, Sat. noon–4.

Woodland Park

One of 28 city green spaces, Woodland Park has a playground, ball fields, rose gardens, and a picnic area. Geese, ducks, peacocks, and black swans flutter to the pond, which in winter opens for ice skating; there's a warming hut nearby. Open June–August, Woodland Water Park is an affordable and popular attraction with a pool, waterslides, and the "Lazy River" float.