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Communities within the valley include: Lolo in Missoula County; and Florence, Stevensville, Victor, Corvallis, Hamilton, Darby, Conner, and Sula in Ravalli County. Hamilton, the largest town and the county seat of Ravalli County, is located at 46°14.8'N and 114°09.6'W at an elevation of 3,570 feet (1,090 m) with a population of 12,000.
Ravalli County is a county in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Montana.As of the 2020 census, the population was 44,174. [1] Its county seat is Hamilton. [2]Ravalli County is part of a north–south mountain valley bordered by the Sapphire Mountains on the East and the Bitterroot Mountains on the West.
Hamilton High School; The Bitterroot College Program of the University of Montana is located in Hamilton. [24] In May 2012, it was renamed Bitterroot College University of Montana. [25] [26] The Bitterroot Public Library serves the town of Hamilton. It was one of the 17 Carnegie libraries built in Montana. [27]
Hamilton King deals in a range of developments, from new builds to older developments that have been refurbished or renovated; handling maintenance of common areas within complexes; arrangement of finances; collection of rents and service charges and property management services. [1] Hamilton King Management Limited's registered offices are ...
Bitterroot National Forest comprises 1.587 million acres (6,423 km 2) in west-central Montana and eastern Idaho of the United States. It is located primarily in Ravalli County, Montana (70.26% of the forest), but also has acreage in Idaho County, Idaho (29.24%), and Missoula County, Montana (0.49%).
A studio apartment, or studio condo [1] also known as a studio flat (), self-contained apartment (), efficiency apartment, bed-sitter (), or bachelor apartment, is a small dwelling in which the normal functions of a number of rooms – often the living room, bedroom, and kitchen – are combined into a single room.
The Goff House is a historic house in Hamilton, Montana. It was built in 1910 for Daniel T. Goff, a businessman. [2] Goff was the manager of the Bitter Root Land and Development Company. [2] In 1920, the house was later acquired by Mabel Robbins, the widow of county clerk Fred Robbins. [2] By the 1980s, it belonged to the Roy family. [2]
The Northern Bitterroot Range is the northernmost and shortest subrange of the Bitterroot Mountains. The Northern Bitterroots encompass 1,869 square miles (4,841 km 2 ) and its two tallest peaks are the 7,930 foot (2,417 m) Rhodes Peak and the 7,770 foot (2,368 m) Quartz Benchmark .