Filed Under Virginia City

Mrs. Slade's House

Virginia City National Historic Landmark District

Maria Virginia Slade was likely the first tenant of this modest dwelling owned by pioneer merchant/miner F. R. Merk. On March 19, 1864, Vigilantes hanged Jack Slade, swiftly carrying out the controversial sentence because they feared that the beautiful, persuasive Mrs. Slade would arrive and change their minds. Mrs. Slade thundered into town on her black thoroughbred a few minutes too late. Local legend has it that she kept her husband’s body here in a zinc-lined coffin filled with whiskey. After spring thaw she took him to Salt Lake City for burial. In the house a year later on March 23, 1865, Mrs. Slade married her husband’s friend, Jim Kiskadden. The couple moved to Salt Lake City and divorced in 1868. By the 1890s, the Bartlett family owned this property, and it later served as parsonage for the Methodist Church (1902-1936). The original beveled siding and gable roof are typical of Virginia City’s first frame dwellings.

Images

Mrs. Slade's House, Virginia City, Montana.
Mrs. Slade's House, Virginia City, Montana. View of a small, single story house with a wooden fence. Hills visible in the background. Identified as the former home of Virginia Slade in Virginia City, Montana. The home may have also served as the Methodist parsonage and was later occupied by Zena Hoff. Source: PAc 956-413. Montana Historical Society Research Center Photograph Archives, Helena, MT. Creator: Unknown photographer Date: 7-26-1901

Location

Van Buren Street, Virginia City, Montana | Private

Metadata

The Montana National Register Sign Program, “Mrs. Slade's House,” Historic Montana, accessed April 16, 2024, https://historicmt.org/items/show/897.