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Malta (/ ˈ m ɔː l t ə / ⓘ MAWL-tə) is a city in, and the county seat of, Phillips County, Montana, United States, [3] located at the intersection of U.S. Routes 2 and 191. The population was 1,860 at the 2020 census .
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This list of cemeteries in Montana includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
Phillips County Carnegie Library is a Carnegie library on the National Register of Historic Places located in Malta, Montana. It was added to the Register on August 27, 1980. [1] For a time, it was used as a museum interpreting local history. It was built of tan brick on a stone foundation in 1917.
Moved to Montana from New Hampshire after finishing college; lived and worked in Helena, Butte, and then Glendive: Pioneer of women's rights in Montana; teacher; first woman to practice law in Montana and the first woman ever to plead a case before the U.S. Circuit Court; first woman to run for state Attorney General [191] George Horse-Capture
Morgan is located at the Canada–United States border on U.S. Route 191, 44 miles (71 km) north of Malta. In the footnotes of The Big Roads (2011) by Earl Swift, the author says that Morgan is the U.S. settlement farthest away (191.4 miles) from an Interstate highway .
Theresa Lamebull (1896 – August 2007), a supercentenarian, was believed to have been be the oldest living member of the A'aninin Tribe of Montana and possibly the oldest Native American ever recorded. James Welch (1940 – August 4, 2003) was an award-winning author and poet. He wrote the novel Winter in the Blood