Several small
unincorporated communities, one
incorporated town, and one
incorporated city are located within the county.
Cut Bank, the
county seat with a population of around 3,000, is located in eastern Glacier County, on the edge of the
Great Plains. Cut Bank arose from the railway and agricultural needs of the surrounding area, and was fostered by an
oil boom in the
1920s. The town's diverse population is a result of this settlement. Town resources and services include a hospital and clinic, an historic airport (with regional and international connections), a nine-hole
golf course, and a municipal swimming pool. Nearby historical sites from the
Lewis and Clark expedition, among other historic and prehistoric locations, can be visited. The Glacier County Museum has a collection of archaeological artifacts, historic buildings, community memorabilia, and a comprehensive archive of early area history and individuals, including a large collection of data on Blackfeet history.
Browning is the home and government seat of the Blackfeet Tribe. The incorporated portion of Browning, at 1,400 residents, does not reflect the total population of around 7,000 in the wider community, largely representative of the Blackfeet Tribe on a part of their ancestral homeland, which dates back over 400 years. Town businesses and resources include a federal building,
Blackfeet Community College, Native American Museum and Heritage Center,
casino, fairgrounds,
racetrack, and Native American camp area that hosts an annual Native American celebration and
powwow.
Babb is a small, unincorporated farming and ranching community on the
Blackfeet Indian Reservation. The community experiences a large influx of tourists in the summer months, as it is the gateway to the
Many Glacier area of
Glacier National Park. Community infrastructure includes one school, a
US post office, a
fire station, and a
general store as well as a
motel,
gas station, several restaurants, and two churches. Nearby attractions include the aforementioned Glacier National Park, the historic
Many Glacier Hotel, the
St. Mary River and Irrigation Canal, and
Chief Mountain, as well as the
Piegan and
Chief Mountain border crossings with Alberta, Canada.
East Glacier Park Village, a small winter community, grows in the summertime with many visitors and the summer workforce, hailing from all parts of the globe to meet the needs of the larger population. It is the site of the largest of Glacier Park's historic hotels and its fleet of "red buses". It has a nine-hole golf course, campgrounds, trail rides, boat rides, and native interpretive tours.
St. Mary is an unincorporated community on the western border of the Blackfeet Native American Reservation, located adjacent to Glacier National Park. The village is the eastern terminus of the
Going-to-the-Sun Road which bisects the park east-to-west at a length of . Fewer than 50 people reside in the village year-round; however, the population increases tenfold on a busy summer evening. It has several lodges, restaurants and cafés, a small grocery store, two gas stations and campgrounds. A large housing area for
National Park Service personnel is located adjacent to the village, within the park.
U.S. Route 89 passes through the village, which lies between
Saint Mary Lake in Glacier National Park and Lower St. Mary Lake on the Blackfeet Native American Reservation.
Starr School is a
census-designated place (CDP) in Glacier County. The population was 252 at the 2010 census. ==Geography==