Skeptoid - Skeptoid #413: 3-7-77: The Montana Vigilance Code Aired: 2014-05-06 Duration: 17:56 === Montana Vigilante Code Mystery (06:44) === [00:00:03] People in the state of Montana like to handle things themselves without any annoying official interference. [00:00:10] And occasionally, this extends to taking the law into their own hands. [00:00:14] In fact, the state has a rich history of doing just that. [00:00:18] And Montana vigilanteism is symbolized by a strange code, the numbers 3777. [00:00:25] What does it mean? [00:00:27] And more importantly, what does it mean if somebody shows that code to you? [00:00:33] The Montana Vigilance Code is coming right up on Skeptoid. [00:00:41] Hi, I'm Alex Goldman. [00:00:43] You may know me as the host of Reply All, but I'm done with that. [00:00:47] I'm doing something else now. [00:00:49] I've started a new podcast called Hyperfixed. [00:00:51] On every episode of Hyperfixed, listeners write in with their problems and I try to solve them. [00:00:56] Some massive and life-altering, and some so minuscule it'll boggle your mind. [00:01:00] No matter the problem, no matter the size, I'm here for you. [00:01:04] That's HyperFixed, the new podcast for Radiotopia. [00:01:07] Find it wherever you listen to podcasts or at hyperfixedpod.com. [00:01:16] You're listening to Skeptoid. [00:01:18] I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. [00:01:22] 3777, the Montana Vigilance Code. [00:01:27] Woe be unto he that attracts the ire of the Montana Highway Patrol, or to the enemy that finds himself in the crosshairs of a fighter plane of the Montana Air National Guard. [00:01:38] For all these uniforms bear a symbol steeped in antiquity and mystery alike, the code 3777. [00:01:46] What does it mean? [00:01:47] Those who wear it claim only that they don't know, but legend says the riddle is known to those in years past who were shown the symbol just before dying at the hands of the Montana Vigilance Committee. [00:02:01] The state of Montana is not best known for its warm embrace of federal interference. [00:02:07] People in Montana tend to like to have things their own way. [00:02:11] Threatening a Montanan on his own property is not likely to go well for you. [00:02:15] Many still consider their sidearm to be the most efficient form of justice. [00:02:19] In the 19th century, when no meaningful law had penetrated that far west, your sidearm was likely to be your only justice. [00:02:28] And when the enemy was many, or more than one person or town could handle, Montanans and other Westerners developed their own form of law that protected the public interest with maximum efficiency. [00:02:40] They were called vigilance committees. [00:02:42] Frontier justice was not slowed by bureaucracy or derailed by official trivialities. [00:02:48] It was swift, comprehensive, not subject to appeal, and almost always found at the end of a rope. [00:02:57] The origin of 3777 has been debated by Montanans ever since it became publicly known in the late 19th century, but its meaning is clear. [00:03:07] No disorderly conduct will be tolerated by the citizens. [00:03:11] If you visit Montana, especially the small towns, you might be surprised at where and how often you'll see 3777 inscribed. [00:03:20] I've been there and I've seen it, but don't take my word for it. [00:03:23] Keep an eye out for it yourself if life ever drives you through Montana's backcountry. [00:03:29] Not to be confused with Virginia City, Nevada, so famous for its mines on the Comstock Load and for Mark Twain's writings in his book Roughing It, Virginia City, Montana is a beautifully preserved and happy little hamlet on Highway 287, set amid a bucolic backdrop of small farms and the remains of dredge mining operations. [00:03:50] But in 1864, it became famous for its administration of frontier justice. [00:03:55] The nation's attention was on the Civil War, raging between the North and the South. [00:04:00] But here, west of the Great Plains, there was little interest in those doings. [00:04:04] The focus was on mining and all the branches of commerce that supported it. [00:04:09] Men, money, and whiskey were plenty, and crime was equally in vogue. [00:04:14] Then in just the first five weeks of 1864, vigilante writers hanged 21 villains, including the rogue sheriff Henry Plummer, who was believed to be the head of a gang responsible for some 100 murders. [00:04:27] Justice was come to the territory. [00:04:31] How the code 3777 came to be associated with the Montana Vigilantes is something of a historical puzzle. [00:04:39] As is so often the case, our best path to solve this mystery is to go back to the primary literature. [00:04:45] We look at the books and newspaper reports pertaining to Montana Vigilance to see when and where 3777 first appears. [00:04:54] Thomas Josiah Dimsdale's book, The Vigilantes of Montana, is the best known and most comprehensive source of information on these wild days. [00:05:04] Professor Dimsdale was the territorial superintendent of public education and the editor-in-chief of the Montana Post. [00:05:12] But in his book, the Code 3777 never appears once. [00:05:18] This is not proof, but it's a strong clue that the code was not yet in use at the time of the book's original publication, which was between 1864 and Professor Dimsdale's death in 1866. [00:05:31] It's not until 1879, 15 years after the committee's 1864 Glory Days, that any surviving print record shows that these numbers were in use, and it appeared in the November 3rd, 1879 issue of the Helena Herald newspaper. [00:05:48] Editor Robert Fisk had been a frequent and colorful reporter of the activities of the vigilance committees and a strong supporter of their activity. [00:05:56] Fisk wrote, There is no disguising the fact that Helena at this time is the rendezvous of a score or more of very hard characters, men that have no visible means of a livelihood and that are watching for opportunities to rob and even murder, if necessary, to carry out their infamous purposes. [00:06:14] Would it not be a wise precautionary step to invite some of these desperate characters to take a walk? [00:06:21] Or shall we wait for other murders and robberies? [00:06:24] Or perhaps until they burn the town again? [00:06:28] And then, on the night of September 1st, 1879, the slogan 3777 was painted on walls and fences all over the town. [00:06:38] And with that, it became a permanent slogan of Montana vigilantism. [00:06:42] But it also triggered the mystery. === The 77 Second Ultimatum (02:55) === [00:06:47] Did it represent 3 hours, 7 minutes, and 77 seconds? [00:06:53] This has been the most common explanation that if 3777 was painted on your door or handed to you on a card, you had 3 hours, 7 minutes, and 77 seconds to leave town. [00:07:04] But it makes no sense. [00:07:06] 7 minutes and 77 seconds is incorrect notation. [00:07:10] It should be 8 minutes and 17 seconds. [00:07:12] Either way, it's a completely arbitrary amount of time, and no intelligent vigilante could reasonably expect such a message to be understood. [00:07:21] There's no point in troubling to paint someone a message if there's no hope of it being understood. [00:07:28] The day before, a shopkeeper was robbed at gunpoint and Fisk's final publication before the public painting of 377 spoke of the town's ruffians as follows. [00:07:39] The day approaches when an hour's notice will send the crowd tramping from town. [00:07:44] An hour's notice, a common enough term. [00:07:47] Nothing in the printed record ever referenced 3 hours, 7 minutes, and 77 seconds. [00:07:57] Hey everyone, I want to remind you about a truly unique and once-in-a-lifetime adventure. [00:08:03] Join me and Mediterranean archaeologist Dr. Flint Dibble for a skeptoid sailing adventure through the Mediterranean Sea aboard the SV Royal Clipper, the world's largest full-rigged sailing ship. [00:08:17] This is also the only opportunity you'll have to hear Flint and I talk about our experiences when we both went on Joe Rogan to represent the causes of science and reality against whatever it is that you get when you're thrown into that lion pit. 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[00:09:28] That's skeptoid.com slash adventures. [00:09:38] Was it a command to take the next stage out of town? === Decoding the Seven Plus Twenty-Four (05:58) === [00:09:43] In his 2013 book, A Decent Orderly Lynching, author Frederick Allen wrote, The men responsible for posting the numbers did not see fit to give a public explanation of their meaning, but the message appears to have been an ultimatum directed at some two dozen roughnecks to get out of town using a $3 ticket on the 7 a.m. stagecoach to Butte by order of a secret committee of 77. [00:10:09] Or so the author believes, based on extensive research undertaken for this book. [00:10:16] But Allen failed to make a convincing case. [00:10:18] Again, no one in his right mind could expect the simple message to be interpreted in such a specific and intricate way. [00:10:26] Just think of the number of things in life that a 3, a 7, and a 77 might conceivably pertain to. [00:10:33] Allen did offer as a justification the fact that the warning did appear to have been obeyed, citing a November 12th article in the Butte Minor, which said that the town's streets were, quote, getting filled with tough characters. [00:10:46] Though how he made this connection or how Butte was implied in the warning was not made clear. [00:10:53] Was it the dimensions of a grave? [00:10:56] A number of authors have speculated that the code refers to a grave three feet wide, seven feet long, and 77 inches deep. [00:11:04] But outside of references to this speculation, I found not a single case of a grave ever having been described by those dimensions. [00:11:11] The common vernacular at the time, describing a grave by its dimensions, was simply six feet deep, or six feet under. [00:11:19] So if the vigilantes hoped to be understood, they would have more likely written this than the unfamiliar and irrelevant numbers 3777. [00:11:30] Did it represent the sum 24 for 24 hours? [00:11:34] Some WAGs have suggested that if you add up all the digits, 3 plus 7 plus 7 plus 7, you get 24, as in, you have 24 hours to leave town. [00:11:45] Again, if this was the intended meaning, then why not just write 24? [00:11:50] 3777 would merely guarantee that your message would not be comprehensible, and thus wouldn't serve anyone's purpose. [00:11:58] Was it a reference to a date? [00:12:01] Obviously, 3777 refers to March 7, 1877, in the American style, or possibly July 3, 1877, in the European style. [00:12:12] Both dates are prior to Fisk's 1879 publication. [00:12:17] However, no historians have found anything of special significance to crime or vigilance on either day. [00:12:23] If there ever was, it was not noteworthy enough to be published in a newspaper. [00:12:29] Was it a Masonic reference? [00:12:32] In 1974, historian Rex Myers wrote a compelling article for Montana, the magazine of Western History, proposing that the code has Masonic roots. [00:12:43] Myers suggests that the three referred to the three immigrants from Minnesota who founded Montana's first lodge in 1862. [00:12:51] The seven referenced seven prominent Virginia City Masons who formed a vigilance committee and signed an oath in 1863. [00:13:00] And the 77 represented a Mason named Bell who died of fever in 1862, plus the 76 others said to have attended his funeral. [00:13:11] Myers' narrative is worthy of serious consideration. [00:13:14] For one thing, the timing works very well. [00:13:17] The seven signed their oath on December 23, 1863, only a few days before those first weeks of 1864 in which the Montana Vigilance Committee rode forth and hanged so many. [00:13:30] Three founding Masons, seven strong-arm masons, and 77 worshiping brethren. [00:13:38] Other parts of the timeline don't work so well, though. [00:13:41] From all historical records, no researcher has been able to find any reference to the code until Fisk's 1879 article. [00:13:48] That's more than 14 years after the seven committee members signed the oath in Virginia City. [00:13:54] Would any have even remembered them by then? [00:13:56] Some had doubtless passed away in the ensuing decade and a half. [00:14:00] Others had taken their places. [00:14:02] And the count of 77 men at Bell's funeral seems no more solid than any other anecdote. [00:14:08] The account of Bell's funeral is known only from the book Vigilante Days and Ways, published in 1890 by Nathaniel Langford, who presided at Bell's funeral. [00:14:18] Langford made no mention of the number of mourners. [00:14:21] It appears to be a modern invention. [00:14:24] Or if not an invention, then a post-hoc rationalization to explain the number 77. [00:14:31] Meyer's proposal has two things that no other hypothesis has, however. [00:14:36] Plausibility and at least some amount of provenance. [00:14:40] Despite its imperfection as an explanation for 3777, the Masonic connection has historical precedent, a reasonable explanation, and a reasonable likelihood of surviving those 14 years in enough secrecy to keep it out of the few records that survive today. [00:14:58] And the symbol certainly does survive today. [00:15:01] The Freemasons' historic Bannock Lodge, number 3777, costs $37.77 for a lifetime membership. [00:15:10] In A Decent Orderly Lynching, Frederick Allen found that Superintendent of Montana Highway Patrol, Alex Stevenson, personally designed the existing logo that incorporates the 3777 code. [00:15:23] Allen wrote, A rock-jawed old-school lawman, Stevenson was entirely ignorant of the numbers' convoluted history and believed they simply honored the vigilantes of 1864. [00:15:34] We chose the symbol, he explained later, to keep alive the memory of this First People's Police Force. === Freemason Lodge Number Three Seven Seven Seven (02:14) === [00:15:41] It is no dinosaur. [00:15:43] As recently as 2013, the Montana Highway Patrol changed its toll-free phone number to 855-MHP 3777. [00:15:54] You can find the code in the gift shops, on the postcards, on the Masonic Lodges, and on official state materials. [00:16:01] And it is most assuredly found alongside the siren that rolls up behind you should you cross the Montana law. [00:16:08] Be good, keep your manners, and mind your P's and Qs if you're going to Montana. [00:16:13] It's advice that's no less wise today than it was in 1864. [00:16:19] For more Skeptoid weekly in your inbox, make sure you're also getting the weekly Skeptoid companion email. [00:16:26] Get my wonder of the week and other regular features. [00:16:30] Come to skeptoid.com and click on newsletter. 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