Hinsdale

Hinsdale is north of Glasgow on the Milk River. According to one writer, it was named for a town in New Hampshire after a “spin of the globe”; but according to another source, it was named for a town in Illinois.
This Hi-Line community, situated on the Milk River, was established in 1891 when the Great Northern Railroad made its way west. A boxcar, serving as the railroad depot, was the first building. Hi-Line, or High Line, is a much-used Montana term which indicates both the route laid out by the Great Northern Railroad and US Highway 2 where it traverses the windswept, glaciated plains and shallow valleys of northern Montana. Much of the High Line follows the Missouri and Milk rivers, extending roughly from Poplar past Fort Peck Reservoir, to Glasgow and Malta, Chinook and Havre, and on to Shelby, Cut Bank, and Browning, ending up in Glacier National Park. (from Cheney’s Names on the Face of Montana, Mountain Press Publishing Company)
North of this river town, you'll find some of the most spectacular and seldom-visited badlands in Montana. Rock Creek Road, about three miles east of Hinsdale, heads north to Canada and leads into this region. About 18 miles up the road you'll be skirting the western edge of a true prairie wilderness-the Bitter Creek region. Check with the Bureau of Land Management Office in Glasgow for a map and a description of the Bitter Creek Wildlife viewing area. It's a loop trip through these badlands. The BLM recommends that you take a full eight hours to do the trip. They also recommend the use of a 4-wheel drive vehicle.
The terrain you'll be driving though along Rock Creek is cowboy country. The ranches are big here and distances between them are great. You can camp in Hinsdale if you want to see more of these badlands or fish the Milk River.