The Arlee Community Center, like most everything else, is along Highway 93 as it passes through town. It is a wood sided building dating from 1910, originally the first school house in Arlee, later turned into a community center. Around the back, in the basement, is the Jockco Valley Public Library. The library occupies the east half of the basement while the Fire Department’s training room is in the west half.
The
History of the Library tells us that the building is now known as the Arlee Brown Building. The centre is available to rent for private functions. Cost is $25 per hour up to 4 hours or $150 per day. Non-profit organizations may rent the facility at half price. Funerals, benefits and memorials are free of charge to community members. Tables and chairs may be rented for off-site use at a rate of $1/day per chair and $2/day per table.
The town of Arlee was named for the Nez Perce Sub-chief, Arlee, who, in October of 1873, led a group of Salish people on a trek from the Bitterroot Valley to the Jocko Agency, later to be known as the Flathead Indian Agency, a few miles north of Arlee.
A census-designated place (CDP), Arlee, presently with a population of around 600, remained only an Indian Agency until the arrival of the Northern Pacific Railroad and the construction of a depot in 1883. From that time it slowly grew, becoming a trading centre for the Jocko Valley, which it remains today.
The major annual event in Arlee is the
Arlee Celebration (Pow Wow), a five day event which takes place every Fourth of July Weekend. The first Pow Wow took place in 1898, later to become an annual event. Today the
Arlee Rodeo has become part of the Pow Wow. Three miles north of Arlee is the
Garden of One Thousand Buddhas, a very impressive display of, well, One Thousand Buddhas. Signage along Highway 93 will guide one to it.
Arlee was named after the Salish leader Arlee. In October 1873, he moved a small group of his people from the Bitterroot Valley, which was designated a “conditional reservation” in the 1855 Hellgate Treaty, to the Jocko Agency (later Flathead Indian Agency) located a few miles north of the current town of Arlee. This forced move stemmed from the efforts of a congressional delegation led by future president James Garfield to negotiate Salish removal from the Bitterroot Valley. The town of Arlee gained importance in 1883 when the Northern Pacific Railroad established a depot there. Two years later, the post office opened its doors in Arlee. Another notable event occurred in 1898 when the first (now annual) Fourth of July powwow was held at Arlee.
From the Montana Place Names Companion