the nez perce, very peaceful. but there's the threat of the sioux indians, the cheyenne, the blackfoot from up north, so there was a fear for that. plus, in my opinion, the missoulaleaders of understood that once you get the government in, you can't get them out. and they pay an ungodly amount of money to the community. i think it was a shrewd decision by the city founders to pursue having a fort. there's the noncommissioned officer quarters. there's the root cellar. and the carriage house. those are the only three structures that still remain. in the early 1900s, it is called the million-dollar fort. rather than close it, the senator scott $1 million to invest more in it. so, we got a lot, a lot of those structures left on the historical museum grounds. is not rest of it which part of the museum, but still there, still active, not militarily, contains the old row, the old barracks building, supply houses, cook houses. those were the parts that were theemely valuable during and alsod of the fort the internment cam