This Pride Month, the American Heritage Center highlights the Roberta R. “Bobbie” Zenker papers, an important addition to our collection documenting varied experiences in the American West. Acquired in March 2023, this collection provides researchers with valuable primary source material chronicling one person’s unique journey through Montana’s legal, social, and natural landscapes.
A Montana Legal Career and Personal Transformation
Born in Silver Spring, Maryland, in 1957, Zenker established a distinguished legal career in Montana, eventually serving as Madison County Attorney from 1997 to 2006. The collection documents both this professional journey and Zenker’s subsequent personal transformation as a transgender woman, as chronicled in her memoir TransMontana: A Memoir of Transformation in Body, Mind, and Spirit.
“At the pinnacle. I was 48 years old. I was the county attorney,” Zenker recalls in her December 2024 oral history with AHC Archivist Leslie Waggener and collaborator Gregory Hinton. The collection offers researchers unique insights into both professional life in rural Montana’s legal system and the personal challenges of gender transition in a small-town context.
Faith Across Transitions
A distinctive aspect of Zenker’s papers is the documentation of her spiritual journey. Raised Catholic and later experiencing what she describes as a “born again” moment during a high school retreat, Zenker’s collection reveals how faith remained constant throughout life’s transitions.
“I think it kept me alive,” Zenker notes when discussing spirituality’s role during difficult periods. These materials provide researchers with nuanced perspectives on the intersection of faith and personal identity in rural America—perspectives that often defy simple categorization.
The Photographer’s Eye: From Hunter to Observer
Perhaps the most visually compelling elements of the Zenker collection are her wildlife photographs, which represent another significant transformation. After decades as a hunter in Montana, Zenker eventually exchanged her rifle for a telephoto lens—a shift she describes poignantly in her oral history:
When you hunt, you train your scope on the vitals of an animal. When you take a photograph, at least I trained my lens on the eyes… And I believe that the eyes are in fact a window to the soul. And once you’ve looked into the soul of an animal, you can never shoot them again.”
This philosophical evolution is documented through photographs and writings that will interest researchers studying changing relationships with Montana’s natural environment.
Documenting Changing Times in Montana
Beyond personal narrative, the Zenker collection provides important documentation of Montana communities from the 1980s through the 2010s. Her experiences in Ashland, Virginia City, Helena, and other locations offer researchers windows into these communities during decades of significant change.
The Roberta R. “Bobbie” Zenker papers are available for research at the AHC. The collection includes correspondence, newspaper clippings, photographs, speeches, manuscripts, notes, and her published memoir, offering scholars a comprehensive resource for understanding multiple aspects of Montana history.
Explore More LGBTQ+ History at the AHC
The story of Bobbie Zenker’s journey reflects the broader narrative of LGBTQ+ visibility that evolved throughout the late 20th century. To explore how mainstream media portrayed queer experiences during these pivotal decades, visit our online exhibit “A Different Kind of Spotlight: How the media has portrayed queerness throughout the decades.”
This digital exhibition features materials from the Bennett Hammer collection, showcasing LGBT+ community representation in media from the ‘80s and ‘90s—the same era when Zenker was establishing her legal career and beginning her personal transformation.
Post contributed by AHC Archivist Leslie Waggener.
