Powell County is a county located in the state of Montana. Based on the 2010 census, the population was 7,027. Its county seat is Deer Lodge
Mount Powell, which in turn was named for John Wesley Powell, the early environmentalist and explorer
County QuickFacts: CensusBureau Quick Facts
Powell County was created 31 January 1901 from Missoula and Deer Lodge Counties. County seat: Deer Lodge
The area included within the boundaries of Powell County, Montana,
was from 1803-1848 located in what was loosely identified as the Oregon
Country. After the creation of the Oregon Territory in 1848 it was part
of that territory until 1853 when it was included in the new territory
of Washington. It became a part of Idaho Territory in 1863 and on January
16, 1864 the County of Deer Lodge was established by the legislature
of Idaho with the county seat located at Idaho City (near the Cottonwood
Fork of the Deer Lodge River). The county was never organized and it
was not until Montana became a territory that Deer Lodge County really
existed. On February 2, 1865 the first legislature of Montana Territory
created nine counties of which Deer Lodge was one. The county seat was
established at Silver Bow and changed to Deer Lodge City December 10,
1867.
Various changes have been made in the boundaries of the original
Deer Lodge county at different times. The original county has been divided
several times. Silver Bow, Granite and Powell counties were taken from
the original county of Deer Lodge. Within the present confines of Powell
County many important events in Montana history have occurred. The proposed
making of the Lewis and Clark Trail has aroused the interest of every
community along the trail in the story of this famous expedition. A
study is being made of the proximity of various localities to the route
of the explorers. While the expedition did not pass through Powell County
on the journey westward, in 1805, Lewis on his return trip crossed the
northern part of Powell County in July, 1806. The explorers separated
at Lolo. Clark and his party followed up the Bitterroot River over the
Big Hole Pass and down the tributaries of the Jefferson to the Yellowstone
while Lewis with nine men traveled the Hellgate (Missoula) River to
the Big Blackfoot and up that river to Lander's Fork and on July 7,
1806 crossed the Rocky Mountains by way of the pass known today as the
Lewis and Clark Pass. Lewis and his men entered Powell County on July
5, 1806. These were the first white men on record to enter the area
included in Powell County: Meriwether Lewis, Patrick Gass, George Drouillard,
Joseph and Reuben Fields, Robert Frazier, Silas Goodrich, Hugh McNeal,
John Thompson, and William Werner.
After Lewis and Clark came the fur hunters, trappers and traders of
both American and Canadian companies. Warren Angus Ferris of the American
Fur Company visited the valley of the "Deer House Plains" with a party
of trappers, September 11, 1831. He wrote a vivid account of the mound
at Warm Springs which was called the Lodge of the White Tail Deer, because
of the number of deer that came to the mound to lick the salty deposits.
At this time, 1831, and later John Work of the Hudson's Bay Company
with a company of trappers traveled through the Valley of the Deer Lodge
and commented on the scarcity of beaver in the river due to the extensive
trapping and hunting of the Americans and Indians.
The Deer Lodge Valley was in the path of all travel through the northwest
from the beginning. It was used by the Indians on their hunting journeys
and the white men followed the road of the Indian. The Blackfoot River
was known as the Cokallanishkit or "the river of the road to the buffalo."
The engineers of the Stevens survey of 1853-1855 crossed by way of the
Cadotte Pass, Lewis and Clark Pass and Mullan Pass. The Mullan Military
Road built in 1858-1862 from Walla Walla, Washington to Fort Benton,
went through Powell County up the Deer Lodge River to the Little Blackfoot.
In the spring of 1858, the Stuart brothers, James and Granville, Rezin
Anderson and others came into the valley to hunt and prospect, and on
May 2, 1853 made a discovery of gold on Gold Creek. The Stuarts had
heard the story of Benetsee Finley finding gold there in 1852. Their
party had no tools for prospecting and mining or no provisions except
the game that they killed. I remember Granville Stuart said they used
ashes from their fires to season the meat as they had no salt. Plans
were made to kill and dry enough meat to last them to Fort Bridger on
the Overland Trail where they could buy the necessary supplies for a
longer stay in the valley. On June 16, 1858, the party left for Fort
Bridger and the Stuarts did not return until late in 1860.
John Francis Grant better known as "Johnny" Grant, a son of Captain
Richard Grant of the Hudson's Bay Company, was probably the first permanent
settler in Powell County. He built two log cabins and corrals at the
mouth of the Little Blackfoot River in November, 1859. The location
was on a road traveled by several Indian tribes on their way to and
from the buffalo country. Grant had a supply of merchandise for sale
and traded with the Indians and did a thriving business. The valley
made an excellent pasture for the worn out cattle bought from the emigrants
on the Overland Trail. When the stock grew fat, herders drove the herds
down the trail for resale and the profits were large. Several other
men built cabins close by and the settlement was known as Grantsville.
The winter of 1860 saw several other settlements in the valley, on
Cottonwood Creek about a mile above Deer Lodge was Tom Lavatta's home.
Joe Hill had a cabin near by as well as several other Mexicans which
gave the name of Spanish Fork to the community. The Stuarts and others
were at Gold Creek which was known as American Fork. Bob Dempsey's home
six miles below Gold Creek was known as Dublin. In the summer of 1863
Grant moved from the Little Blackfoot to what is now Kohr's Ranch north
of Deer Lodge and there built the first pretentious house in Montana
which is still part of the Kohr's home. It was two stories in height
and had 24 glass windows and green shutters. Johnny was one of the wealthiest
citizens of the territory. He sold his cattle to Conrad Kohrs in 1868
and moved his family to a location near Winnipeg, Canada. This herd
of cattle was the beginning of one of the best known and largest stock
outfits of Montana, the Kohrs Cattle Company.
The wheat and oats planted by the Stuarts in 1861 was probably the
first farming done in the county. In 1862 Captain LaBarge of St. Louis
with his partner James Harkness, Nick Wall and others decided to build
a trading establishment at Cottonwood. The town of LaBarge City was
laid out on Cottonwood Creek. There were four blocks defined in the
survey which is in the records of our Society. From this beginning the
settlement grew in a haphazard manner until 1864. In that year James
Stewart hired Colonel Delacy to survey a townsite one mile square which
was incorporated October 20, 1864 into Deer Lodge City.
The discovery of gold at various points in the western part of the
county, Ophir, Blackfoot City, Pioneer, Bear and Elk Gulches resulted
in the moving of the county seat from Silver Bow to Deer Lodge which
was sometimes mentioned as the "little town on the way to Bear", a roaring
mining camp in Bear Gulch. Any of these camps was more populous in those
years than Deer Lodge where the county seat was located in December,
1867, but it was older and more accessible.
The first post office in the county was at Blackfoot City, September
9, 1866. The first school was taught by D. Newcomer in a log cabin on
Race Track Creek, from December 1, 1865 to April 1, 1866, with 12 pupils.
The first school census of 1867 listed 80 children of school age, 46
males and 34 females. The first schoolhouse in the district and county
was built of logs originally cut and hewed for a jail at Silver Bow.
It was 20 by 24 feet in size, with a nine foot ceiling. Judge Irvine
hauled it from its first location and donated it to the district for
a schoolhouse. This was replaced in January, 1873 by a new building
of which the district was justly proud. It cost altogether, building,
bell, seats etc., almost $3,500.00 and was a credit to the town.
The first newspaper in Deer Lodge, the Weekly Independent was first
published October 12, 1867 and still exists as the Independent Record
of Helena. The Independent moved to Helena in 1874 when the Rocky Mountain
Gazette plant was destroyed by fire. The second newspaper was first
issued July 9, 1869, with James H. Mills as owner and editor. Father
DeRyckere probably held the first church services in Powell County when
he said mass in Johnny Grant's home on Cottonwood in July 1866. That
fall construction of a log church was commenced and completed in December
of 1866. This was replaced by a stone building in 1874. First services
of the Protestant Episcopal church were held by Bishop Tuttle July 19,
1868, the church was organized in 1871. A Presbyterian church was commenced
in 1872 by Sheldon Jackson with Rev J.R. Russel in charge. The first
bank was that of Donell, Clark and Larabie in 1870. Early hotels were
the McBurney and the Scott House. Flint Creek No. 11 established in
1867 was the first Masonic Lodge. Dr. Mitchel1 is given credit for the
first hospital in Deer Lodge but the dates are not consistent, though
he undoubtedly had some arrangements in the '60' s for the care of patients.
St. Joseph's Hospital was opened in October 1873 by the Sisters of Charity
of Levenworth who also built St. Mary's Academy which was begun in 1879
and completed in 1882.
The earliest railroad in Powell County was a branch of the Utah Northern,
built from Butte to the mouth of the Little Blackfoot in 1882. It reached
Deer Lodge in November of that year. The last or "golden spike" of the
Northern Pacific Railroad, which marked the completion of the first
transcontinental railroad through Montana, was driven September 8, 1883
at Gold Creek.
Deer Lodge was one of several Montana cities in the contest for the
location of a permanent capital for the state in 1892. Anaconda and
Helena received the two highest votes in that election and in 1894 Anaconda
was defeated by Helena for the capital site. Since it could not have
the capital, Anaconda decided the county seat should be changed to that
city and in 1896 Anaconda took the county seat from Deer Lodge by a
vote of 3,232 to 1,403. The offices were moved January 25, 1837. As
an excuse for Anaconda's action in taking the county seat, the charge
was made that Deer Lodge had supported Helena for the capital in the
election of 1834, but the Deer Lodge paper stated that at least 70%
of the vote had gone to Anaconda. The change of location of the county
seat was probably responsible for the creation of Powell County, which
occured January 31, 1901, with Deer Lodge designated as the county seat.
The first officers of the new county were: Commissioners: H.B. Davis,
T.B. Mannix, W.T. Kuehn; Sheriff: John McMahan; County Attorney: J.M.
Simpson; Clerk of the Court: R. Lee Kelley; County Clerk and Recorder:
J.H. Mills; Assessor: A.D. Goodfellow; Treasurer: R.G. Humber; Coroner:
Nathan Smith; Superintendent of Schools: Inez Elliot; Administrator:
M.D. Planner. Representatives to the legislature were elected in 1902.
Conrad Kohrs was chosen state senator from Powell County. In 1904 one
faction held that Mr. Kohrs was entitled to another two years as a holdover
and others believed that he was just elected for the two year term.
John Bielenberg was elected state senator that year, 1904. When the
legislature opened in January, 1905, Powell County had two senators,
both Republicans and also related. It was decided by the members of
the senate not to decide the question until late in the session, thus
giving Mr. Kohrs a chance to serve most of the term. About February
20, 1905, a vote was taken which decided Mr. Bielenberg was the lawful
candidate. The whole matter was kept on a friendly basis and the decision
tactfully made. When Powell County was created in 1901 it had a valuation
of $2,496,000.00 and a debt of $62,663.93. Figures of the Montana Taxpayers
Association, June 30, 1944 give the county a tax valuation of $5,361,899.00
and a net total indebtedness of $59,962.00. It has an area of 2,340
square miles and a population of 6,900.
The county takes its name from Mount Powell which was named for one
of the first settlers in the county, John W. Powell. Granville Stuart
said Powell was in this region as early as 1856 and located a ranch
at the foot of the mountain in 1864. He was the first white man to climb
the mountain which was afterwards known by his name. Powell died near
Glendale, Montana in May of 1879.
The old mining camp of Pioneer on Gold Creek is said to have yielded
over $20,000,000.00 in gold during the 60's. After the white men abandoned
the camp the Chinese moved in and worked the ground. At one time there
were over a hundred Chinese in Pioneer. In 1880 Pioneer had a population
of 230 while Missoula had 441. Now there is little left to show there
had been enough people to justify a bank, a post office, Masonic Lodge
etc.
Ovando and Helmville are the centers of prosperous ranching communities
today. The first settlers in the Big Blackfoot country were miners from
nearby camps who took up land when the gold was gone. Ovando was named
for Ovando Hoyt, first postmaster of the town who was settled there
in 1882. Helmville takes its name from Henry Helm who was supposed to
have located there in the 60's.
Garrison was named for William Lloyd Garrison whose son-in-law, Henry
Villard, was the president of the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1883
when Garrison was established. Dempsey was named for the famous old-timer,
Bob Dempsey, who lived in the locality. Racetrack takes its name from
a racetrack built there in the early days. Charles Larabie had thoroughbred
horses in the late 70,s and his stable was famous through-out the territory.
William A. Clark probably made the beginnings of his immense fortune
in his Deer Lodge bank where he bought gold dust from surrounding mining
camps. He was said to have been one of the best judges of gold dust
in the Territory. Several of his Children were born in Deer Lodge.
It would seem that the history of Powell County is mostly the history
of Deer Lodge City, which is true, for Deer Lodge was an important town
in territorial days and is today. The influence of its citizens has
been felt at all times in the economic, educational and political fields
of the state. Many of the pioneers of Deer Lodge were among the most
prominent people of the state. James H. Mills, John Morony, the Larabies,
the Bielenbergs, the Kohrs family, the Stuarts, the Kelleys, the Valitons,
the Trasks the Colemans and many others have their place not only in
the history of Powell County but in the history of Montana.
Some important events in Montana history occurred within Powell County,
such as:
EDITORS NOTE: (This historical article of Powell County was found by Dick Bauman, postmaster, when searching through old records of the Deer Lodge Rotary Club minutes. The author is unknown and when it was written is also unknown. However, this article was probably written in the 1940's since a dated reference is made to that time.)
As reported by the Census Bureau, the county has a total area
of 2,333 square miles (6,042 km2), of which, 2,326 square miles (6,024
km2) of it is land and 7 square miles (17 km2) of it (0.29%) is water.
Bordering counties are as follows: