Mineral County, Montana

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USGenWeb Project

Mineral Map 

Map courtesy of Mike Sweeney
  • Present day county boundaries are lined on map.

  • Hello. I'm Vikki Gray, the Mineral County Coordinator. I add information to this site as I run across it. If you know of anything that should be posted here to help fellow researchers, please let me know. I wanted to pass on a big thank you to JoAnn L. Gemmrig, who was the previous Mineral County Coordinator. She did a great job!

    Mineral County Overview

    Mineral County boasts a lively history. It began as the westerly part of Missoula County. In 1859 Captain John Mullan and his men located a trail along the Clark Fork (Missoula) River westward. This historic trail was later improved and named the Mullan Road. In 1869 L.A. Barrett discovered gold on Cedar Creek. Shortly thereafter the town of Superior was established at the mouth of Cedar Creek. In 1890 the Northern Pacific Railroad was built through the area and in 1897 the first large lumber mill was built at St. Regis. The Milwaukee Railroad was built through the valley in 1907. The following year a devastating flood of the Clark Fork River occurred. Shortly thereafter, Mineral County experienced the trauma of the 1910 fire which destroyed many areas of Mineral County. In 1914, citizens of the area became disenchanted with the services they were receiving from Missoula County and voted to break away and create their own County. After some lively competition, Superior was chosen as the county seat. In 1933 disaster again struck the area, with a fire at St. Regis on July 11 and a flood in December. In 1946 the Missoula River underwent a name change to the Clark Fork River. It flooded the town of Superior 2 years later in 1948. The county was home to many Civilian Conservation Corps workers during the Great Depression. The Historical Registry lists three county buildings, Savenac Nursery Compound (1907), the DeBorgia School House (1908), and the Superior School House.

    The County is 1,223 sq. miles; its land is 82% federal-owned, 3% state-owned and 15% privately-owned; the early mining activity resulted in its name. In recent years the economy has been largely timber-based. Many lumber mills have shared its history. There are 87 miles of river, 650 miles of streams, and over 50 high mountain lakes.

     

     

    NEW! 1920 Listing of Merchants, Tradesmen, and Manufacturer's Business and Credit Directory (this is the forerunner to Dun & Bradstreet). Covers Mineral and Ravalli Counties.

    Resources

    Mineral County research

    GenConnect Boards/Ancestry Boards

    These are a wonderful resource. Post/View queries, bible records, biographies, deeds, obituaries, military pensions and wills here.

    Lookup Volunteers

    are needed badly! Can you help us?

    Cemeteries & Funeral Homes

    A list of known Mineral County Cemeteries. Volunteers needed to transcribe them!

    Several maps of Mineral County for your research.
    Join the Mineral County mailing list and get help from kindred researchers. Note - you may also want to join the Missoula County mailing list. It has alot more activity and Mineral County was carved out of Missoula County.

    Military Records

    A list of all the WWI draft registrations which relate to Mineral County.

    Surnames

    Please submit the Mineral County surnames you are researching so that I can post them here.

    Links

    To other Mineral County resources.
    NEW! Please submit any photos that you may have for posting here.

    Towns and Place Names

    Taken from USGS records

     

     

         

    Mailbox



    E-mail Vikki Gray , Mineral County Coordinator.

     

    This page was last updated Sunday, 02-Mar-2008 12:52:37 MST

    You are our 15448 visitor since 13 Apr 1997.

    Copyright © 1998 by Vikki Gray. All rights reserved. This site may be freely linked to, but not duplicated, in any fashion without my consent. Background and title banner graphics property of Vikki Gray.