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St. Mary or Saint Mary [2] (Blackfeet: Natoaki, "Holy Woman") is an unincorporated community on the western border of the Blackfeet Indian Reservation adjacent to Glacier National Park in Glacier County, Montana, United States.
Reception of a KOA campground in Shingletown, California. KOA annually inspects each campground with a 600-point inspection, which it claims is the most stringent in the business. [8] KOA kampground, Petersburg, Michigan. In 2015, Jim Rogers stepped down as CEO after 15 years and was replaced by the president of the company, Pat Hittmeier. In ...
It was designed by Burt L. Gewalt of the Kalispell, Montana architectural firm Brinkman and Lenon, and was completed in 1967. The complex uses common Mission 66 themes such as native stone, and glulam timber construction, combined with a dramatic roof structure that echoes the mountain peaks in the background.
Founded by the KOA Campground Owners Association, the company's Care Camps Trust provides financial support to more than 100 special nonprofit camps located throughout the United States and Canada ...
In the immediate area, there is also a boat dock as well as sightseeing boats [11] which allow visitors to tour Saint Mary Lake, [12] the second largest lake in the park. "The most popular spot for [Glacier] tourists is Rising Sun, an overlook of Goose Island in St. Mary Lake and one of the most photographed spots in the park." [13]
The Saint Mary Ranger Station (or St. Mary) is a ranger station in Glacier National Park in the U.S. state of Montana. The log cabin was built in 1913 [2] on the east side of the park overlooking Upper Saint Mary Lake. The oldest administrative structures in the park., [3] it features an architecture that foreshadows the National Park Service ...
The St. Mary Utility Area Historic District comprises a support area of Glacier National Park with employee housing and support buildings in the prevailing National Park Service Rustic style. [2] The complex was built by Civilian Conservation Corps labor to replace the administrative facilities at East Glacier Ranger Station in a location more ...
James D. "Jim" Rogers (born 1949) was the President and CEO of Kampgrounds of America (KOA) until December 2015 (when Pat Hittmeier took over). He lives in Reno, NV. Rogers first job at KOA started in 1972 as a management trainee. He stayed for nearly three years before heading to UCLA to complete a master's degree in business administration.