The Jewel of Jeffers

The Jewel of Jeffers The Jewel of Jeffers Inn is a Fine Country Guest Home located 1.5 miles from Ennis, Montana in the majestic Madison River Valley.

Your Airbnb Hosts are Leigh and Robert Fosnot (406) 925-2393 The Jewel of Jeffers is a lovingly restored "Montana Gilded Age" Jeffer's family home that is now a Vacation Guest Home in Ennis/Jeffers, Montana. Located 1.5 Miles from the center of Ennis, Montana. Five (5) Bedrooms w/ five (5) bathrooms. Rental start at $550.00/night for weekly stays. Includes 2 Large Luxury Suites with 700 square fee

t of private space each. Thery both have amazing private FULL bathrooms. The Perfect "All In One" Wedding Venue. Weekly, Monthly discounts through Airbnb. Airbnb Link Below:

https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/13147707?adults=6&check_in=2021-07-11&check_out=2021-07-18&federated_search_id=e238b469-42f7-4362-8521-59db9c170604&source_impression_id=p3_1613333992_jsMKMbJAnfllOJDq&guests=1

06/14/2026

The Chief Joseph Scenic Byway (Wyoming Highway 296) is one of the most breathtaking mountain roads in the American West. Stretching about 47 miles through northwestern Wyoming, the byway connects Cody, Wyoming, with the Beartooth Highway near Cooke City, Montana. Named after the Nez Perce leader Chief Joseph, the route follows part of the historic path used by the Nez Perce tribe during their flight from the U.S. Army in 1877. The highway winds through the Absaroka Mountains, offering dramatic landscapes filled with towering peaks, deep canyons, alpine meadows, and dense forests.

Travelers on the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway experience a constantly changing panorama of natural beauty. The road climbs steep mountain passes and curves around rugged cliffs, providing numerous overlooks where visitors can stop to admire sweeping views. Sunlight Basin is one of the most popular scenic areas, known for its wide valleys and colorful wildflowers during the summer months. Wildlife is abundant along the route, and visitors often spot deer, elk, bighorn sheep, and even bears in the surrounding wilderness.

The byway is especially popular among photographers, motorcyclists, and outdoor enthusiasts because of its peaceful atmosphere and spectacular scenery. Unlike some busier tourist routes, the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway offers a quieter and more remote experience. During autumn, the changing colors of the aspens and cottonwoods create stunning displays of gold and orange across the mountainsides. In winter, heavy snowfall transforms the area into a dramatic alpine landscape, though sections of nearby roads may close due to weather conditions.

In addition to its natural beauty, the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway carries deep historical significance. Interpretive signs along the route tell the story of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce people, whose courage and endurance became an important chapter in American history. Visitors can learn about the tribe’s journey through the mountains while appreciating the same rugged terrain they once crossed. The combination of history, culture, and unforgettable scenery makes the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway one of Wyoming’s most remarkable drives.

Beyond its natural beauty, the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway also serves as an important reminder of Native American history. Interpretive signs and historical markers along the route explain the story of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce people, who traveled through these mountains while seeking freedom. Their courage and determination remain an important part of American history. Because of its combination of stunning scenery, rich wildlife, and historical significance, the Chief Joseph Scenic Byway remains one of Wyoming’s most unforgettable destinations.

06/14/2026

Lake Powell, USA 🇺🇸
Hidden deep within the sandstone canyons of Lake Powell, this flooded grotto once felt like something from another world.

In 1983, boats could glide directly into this cavern, floating beneath towering rock walls while a small waterfall spilled into crystal-clear water. The cave was accessible only because the reservoir had risen high enough to flood the canyon floor, creating a scene that looked almost magical.

Now look at 2026.

The water that once filled the chamber has nearly vanished. Boats can no longer enter where they once floated, and the exposed canyon floor reveals decades of sediment, rock, and mineral deposits. The waterfall still trickles through the stone, but instead of feeding a deep pool, it falls onto mostly dry ground.

The cave itself hasn’t changed.

Its walls, arches, and ancient sandstone formations remain exactly where nature carved them millions of years ago. What changed was the water level that transformed this hidden canyon into a navigable water-filled sanctuary.

Few places show Lake Powell’s retreat more dramatically than this. The cave remains breathtaking, but the lake that once brought visitors inside has largely disappeared.

06/14/2026

In September 2017, marine scientist Nan Hauser was swimming and filming humpback whales near Rarotonga in the Cook Islands. She had spent many years studying whales and felt comfortable around them. However, during this trip, she experienced something she would never forget.

While she was in the water, a large humpback whale suddenly approached her. Instead of swimming away, the whale began pushing her with its head and body. At first, Nan was confused and frightened. The whale was much larger than her, and she worried she could be seriously injured.

For more than seven minutes, the whale continued to push and lift her through the water. It even tried to place her under one of its large fins and lifted her onto its back. Nan struggled to understand why the whale would not leave her alone.

Then she noticed the real risk. Nearby was a large tiger shark, about 18 feet long, moving toward her in an aggressive manner. Nan realized the whale's unusual behavior may have been an attempt to keep her away from the shark.

The humpback stayed between Nan and the shark, repeatedly moving her to a safer position. Eventually, she was able to get back to her boat safely.

Nan believes the whale was deliberately protecting her. Scientists have documented similar protective behavior by humpback whales toward other animals, making the event even more remarkable.

One year later, Nan encountered the same whale again. She recognized it by two unique notches in its tail. The reunion made the extraordinary experience even more memorable.

06/14/2026

Austin — What started as a frustration-driven experiment in a small US garage is now turning into one of the country's fastest-selling home cooling gadgets. The idea is simple: a compact portable device that cools any room in under two minutes — delivering real air conditioning performance at a ...

06/14/2026
06/14/2026

After reaching a settlement with Amber Heard, actor Johnny Depp chose to do something generous with the money he received. Instead of keeping the $1 million settlement for himself, he donated the entire amount to charity.

The money was divided equally among five organizations, with each receiving $200,000. Depp selected charities that support children, Indigenous communities, and environmental conservation.

One of the organizations was the Make-A-Film Foundation, which helps children with life-threatening medical conditions fulfill their dreams of making movies. Another was The Painted Turtle, a camp that provides fun and memorable experiences for children living with serious health challenges.

He also donated to Red Feather, a group that works with Indigenous communities to improve housing and living conditions. Another recipient was the Tetiaroa Society, founded to support conservation efforts on the islands once associated with actor Marlon Brando.

The fifth charity was the Amazonia Fund Alliance, which helps protect Indigenous communities and the rainforest in the Amazon region.

By giving away the entire settlement, Depp directed the money toward causes that help people and protect the environment. His donations supported sick children, improved housing for communities in need, funded conservation projects, and helped preserve Indigenous lands. Rather than keeping the money, he chose to use it to make a positive difference in the lives of others.

06/14/2026

On the fourteenth of April, 2013, a ninety-two-year-old Belgian woman named Marcella Pattyn died in her sleep at the Sint-Jozef care home in the West Flemish city of Kortrijk. She had been blind from an early age. She had spent the previous seventy-two years as a member of a religious movement that, by the documented institutional record, ended with her death.

Marcella Pattyn was the last documented Beguine. The movement of which she had been the final living member had emerged in the Low Countries of medieval Europe around the year 1200. It had survived approximately eight hundred years of documented institutional history. On April 14, 2013, in Kortrijk, the movement ended.

The Economist published her obituary. The end of the Beguines was world news.

The Beguine movement emerged in the documented institutional context of the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries in the documented region of the Low Countries — the modern-day Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and the adjacent regions of northern France and western Germany.

The documented institutional context was specific. The institutional options for an unmarried woman in medieval European Christian society were two: marriage to a man, by which she would become a documented legal subordinate of her husband under medieval canon law; or entry into a religious order, by which she would take documented lifelong vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, surrender her property as a documented dowry to the convent, and accept documented permanent separation from secular life.

The Beguine movement created a documented institutional third option.

A Beguine was, by documented institutional definition, neither a wife nor a nun. She took no documented permanent vows. She could leave the Beguine community at any time, at which point she could marry, return to her family, or pursue any other documented institutional life of her choosing. She could own documented private property. She could maintain documented private income. She lived in a documented institutional cluster of small houses called a beguinage, typically arranged around a central courtyard or chapel.

The Beguines worked. They produced documented contributions to the medieval European textile industry, particularly fine cloth and lace. They brewed beer. They operated hospitals and provided medical care to the sick. They operated schools. They studied theology and produced documented written work in the vernacular languages of their regions.

Three documented thirteenth-century Beguine authors are particularly preserved in the documented institutional record. Hadewijch of Brabant composed documented Middle Dutch mystical poetry. Mechthild of Magdeburg, born around 1207 and died around 1282, wrote The Flowing Light of Divinity in documented Middle Low German. Marguerite Porete, born around 1250, wrote The Mirror of Simple Souls in documented Old French, was condemned by the documented Inquisition, refused to recant, and was burned at the stake in the Place de Grève in Paris on the first of June, 1310. Her book continued to circulate anonymously in documented manuscript copies across medieval Europe for approximately two centuries.

In 1311, Pope Clement the Fifth convened the documented Council of Vienne. The institutional outcome included the documented papal bulls Ad nostrum and Cum de quibusdam, which condemned the Beguines for documented institutional heresy and ordered the dissolution of the Beguine communities. The condemnation was not, in the documented institutional record, fully enforced. Beguine communities continued to operate, particularly in the Low Countries, with documented protection by local bishops and civil authorities.

The Beguine movement survived the Council of Vienne. It survived the documented Reformation, in which most religious communities in the Protestant territories were dissolved. It survived the documented French Revolution, in which the religious communities of France were dissolved. It survived the documented industrial transformation of Europe across the nineteenth century. It survived the two world wars of the twentieth century.

At its documented peak in the medieval period, the movement included tens of thousands of women. Major beguinages operated in Ghent, Bruges, Leuven, Mechelen, Lier, Diest, Kortrijk, Hoogstraten, Tongeren, Sint-Truiden, Turnhout, Dendermonde, and other institutional centers across the Low Countries.

On the second of December, 1998, UNESCO inscribed thirteen of the Flemish beguinages on the documented World Heritage List.

Marcella Pattyn was born on the eighteenth of August, 1920, in Thysville, in the documented Belgian Congo. She was born with impaired vision; by adulthood she was nearly blind. She wished to become a Catholic missionary nun. Multiple missionary orders rejected her application because of her blindness. In 1941, at the age of twenty-one, she was accepted by the Beguinage of Saint Elisabeth at Sint-Amandsberg in Ghent, Belgium. In 1960, she transferred to the Beguinage of Saint Elisabeth in Kortrijk, where she was one of a documented community of nine Beguines. She was the last person to join the Kortrijk community.

She remained in the Kortrijk beguinage until 2005, when she relocated to the Sint-Jozef care home in Kortrijk due to institutional infirmity.

Across the documented decades from 2005 to 2013, the other members of the Kortrijk community died. By 2010, Marcella Pattyn was the documented last living member of the Beguine movement.

On her ninety-first birthday in 2011, the mayor of Kortrijk, Stefaan De Clerck — a former Belgian Minister of Justice — visited her at the Sint-Jozef care home. He is documented as having said to her: You are a piece of world heritage. You cannot go yet.

On the fourteenth of April, 2013, Marcella Pattyn died in her sleep at the Sint-Jozef care home. She was ninety-two years old. She was buried on the nineteenth of April, 2013, in the cemetery of Saint John in Kortrijk, in the documented vault of the Beguines.

The structural reading of the Beguine movement is that the documented institutional ending of the eight-hundred-year-old movement happened on a specific documented date, at a specific documented place, to a specific documented woman whose institutional life had spanned seventy-two years as a Beguine.

The documented institutional movement that emerged in the Low Countries around 1200 ended in Kortrijk on April 14, 2013.

The documented institutional architecture survives. The thirteen Flemish beguinages remain documented World Heritage Sites under UNESCO institutional protection. The institutional movement that built them no longer has a living member.

If her story moved you, drop one word in the comments — Marcella, Beguines, Kortrijk, anything that comes to mind. Tap the like button so more people find this story. The page is small. Every reaction helps us keep telling the stories where an eight-hundred-year-old institutional movement ended on a specific documented date in a specific documented place to a specific documented woman.

We have rooms available for the winter working season.It seems like such a shame to have a 4400 square foot, big house, ...
10/30/2025

We have rooms available for the winter working season.
It seems like such a shame to have a 4400 square foot, big house, completely EMPTY at a time when so many working people need a good place to stay.

This is a Month-to-Month rental.
If you pay for four (4) months ... the fifth (5th) month is free!!!

We are offering rooms, each with a Queen size bed, and a private bathroom.

ALL UTILITIES are included.

The "Common Space" of the house, on the main floor, is about 2000 square feet, with a fully appointed kitchen, and a washer/dryer etc.

All bed Linens and bath towels are included too.

The cost is $850 for a single person and $1,200 for a couple.

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED !!
WiFi, Direct TV, Power, Propane Heating, Water, and a propane outdoor BBQ. Garbage and snow removal are taken care of too.

We really hope we can help Big Sky winter employees have a nice home to stay in.
The house is only 30 miles from Big Sky and Moonlight Ski resorts.
You will need a 4x4 or front wheel drive vehicle to go up the road with your HR issued road pass.

We live in a different little cottage on the same property.

We know how hard it is to find a place to stay !!!
This is a nice short term rental.

Give us a TEXT if we can help:
Leigh @ 406-925-2393
(I cannot answer calls on my phone during my work day ... but I can text you back right away)

Come by and see the house!!!

75 Jeffers Road, Ennis/Jeffers, MT 59729
OR
Check out the photos of the house on our website:

www.JewelofJeffers.com

Address

75 Jeffers Road
Ennis, MT
59729

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