The Butte Central Education Foundation will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the
Maroon Activities Center this weekend during a home basketball double header.
The celebration will be held January 25, 2025, during the boys’ and girls’ varsity
basketball games against the Hamilton Broncs. The boys’ game will be at 4:00 P.M. and the girls’ game will be at 5:30 P.M.

Photo: Tommy O/Townsquare Media
Photo: Tommy O/Townsquare Media
loading...

At halftime of both games, major donors and members of the MAC Planning committee
will be introduced and at halftime of the boys’ game a short video presentation on the
Maroon Activities Center will be shown on the arena jumbotron.  The video will highlight the incredible story behind the Maroon Activities Center which began as simply plans for an auxiliary gymnasium and wound up becoming a major events and entertainment venue not only for Butte Central Catholic Schools but for the entire community and surrounding area.  Since its inception, the MAC has hosted in addition to thousands of Maroon games and functions, divisional and district basketball tournaments, a Frontier Conference Championship as well as numerous youth tournamens and events, concerts, weddings, receptions, reunions, funerals and more.  It's economic impact on the Mining City is in the millions of dollars.

Following the game there will be a reception and social at Metals Bank and Sports Bar and Grill on the corner of Park and Main in Historic Uptown Butte.  All Maroon fans, boosters, and supporters are invited to attend the social.

For additional information on the event please call the Butte Central Education Foundation at 406-723-6706.

7 Montana Towns With The Most Expensive Monthly Bills Revealed

These 7 towns rank within the top 10 for highest monthly bills in 2024 according to Doxo, a website that tracks how much Americans spend each month.

Gallery Credit: Nick Northern

TikTok is back: We'll never forget these 10 songs it made huge

Gallery Credit: Kyle Clark

Amazing Theme Park Rides Based on Movies That Were Never Built

More From 95.5 KMBR