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Eagle Mount is a501(c)(3)non-profit organization that facilitates and implements therapeutic recreational programs and opportunities for people with disabilities, children with cancer, and provides support for their families. The organization was founded inBozeman, Montana, and additional independent Eagle Mount organizations currently exist inBillings, Montana, andGreat Falls, Montana. The information in this article refers to Eagle Mount Bozeman.[1]
The I Am Third Foundation (based onMatthew 22) and Eagle Mount were founded in 1982 by GeneralRobert C. Mathis and his wife, Greta, retired from a 34-year career in the Air Force. According to theBozeman Daily Chronicle, “The couple created more than a program for people with disabilities. They created kinship between anyone who deigns to get involved".[2]
They started in the fall of 1983 with the Eagle Mount ski program at theBridger Bowl ski hill. The following summer, they added horseback riding at a local ranch. The next programs to be added were swimming and theBig Sky Kids camps for children with cancer.
Eagle Mount Bozeman's campus in currently 19 acres which was donated by a local family; ten acres in the mid-1980s and an additional 9 adjacent acres in 2010. The campus includes administrative offices; riding arena with barn and horse paddocks; the Tim and Mary Barnard Aquatic Therapy Center built in 2008; and the gardens and grounds.
Eagle Mount started with skiing in 1983. Other programs includeadaptive horsemanship, aquatic therapy and adaptive swimming, Big Sky Kidsoncology camps,horticultural therapy, the EMBLEM program for veterans, and parent support programs.
Eagle Mount doesalpine skiing andsnowboarding at Bridger Bowl andBig Sky Resort, andNordic skiing andsnowshoeing at Bohart Ranch. Other programs are hosted on the Eagle Mount campus.
The number of participants has increased from 100 in 1982 to 1,783 in 2014. Almost 2,000 volunteers assisted the participants in 2014.
Eagle Mount is a privatenon-profit organization which does not take government funding, instead relying on private donors, grants, and foundations. In-kind donations such as program equipment, ski passes and rental services, horses and hay, and more also facilitate the variety of programs. Support has come from The M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust and the Dennis and Phyllis Washington Foundation. Three annual events are held in support of Eagle Mount Bozeman's programs including the Western Rendezvous, a barn dance and auction fundraiser; the Crystal Ball, a black-tie event; and Digger Days, a collaboration with local construction companies to let people of all ages drive heavy equipment with the support of professional operators.[3]