Missoula
Montana
River towns remember themselves differently. Missoula earned its current shape the hard way, timber and rail first, then the university, then the slow accumulation of people who came for one reason and stayed for several. That history shows up in how the city spends. The neighborhoods south of the Clark Fork run quieter and more residential; downtown and the University District carry the daily commercial weight. Independent businesses have held ground here against the attrition that hollows out other mid-size Montana cities. The brewpub where the crowd runs from grad students to retired loggers without anyone noticing the gap. Residents make deliberate choices about where they spend, and local loyalty functions less like preference and more like mild civic identity. The same farmers market vendor, third season running. The bookstore that's been there long enough to feel institutional rather than boutique. That instinct to return, to know the person behind the counter, is LoLo.

