Western Heritage Center
The Western Heritage Center is a regional history museum located in historic downtown Billings. Housed in the 1901 Parmly Billings Library building, the museum preserves and shares the stories of the Yellowstone River Valley
The Western Heritage Center is a regional history museum located in historic downtown Billings. Housed in the 1901 Parmly Billings Library building, the museum preserves and shares the stories of the Yellowstone River Valley
Visitors will discover spectacular, unparalleled views of Billings and the Yellowstone River Valley from atop the sandstone cliffs.
In 1877, Perry McAdow established a sawmill on property located in Sections 2 and 34 along the Yellowstone River. After the riverboat “Josephine” landed on June 7, 1877, McAdow and John Alderson named the trading post Coulson.
The Billings Depot was constructed in 1909 for use by three railroad companies: Northern Pacific, Great Northern, and Chicago, Burlington and Quincy.
The Pictograph, Middle and Ghost caves were home to generations of prehistoric hunters.
The Moss Mansion Museum is a turn-of-the-century home, designed by New York architect Henry Janeway Hardenbergh and built in 1903.
Known as Montana’s contemporary museum, the Yellowstone Art Museum exhibits, interprets, collects, and preserves art, for the enrichment, education, inspiration and enjoyment of all.
Pompeys Pillar National Monument is a testament to human history, showcasing hundreds of marketing, petroglyphs, and inscriptions that create a living journal of the American West.
The mission of the Yellowstone County Museum is to collect, preserve, and share the history of Montana’s Yellowstone River Basin through storytelling exhibitions and dynamic educational programs.
The Huntley Project Museum of Irrigated Agriculture interprets, preserves, restores and portrays life on the Project from the early 1900s to the late 20th century.