July 30, 2021

The Grant-Kohrs Ranch National Historic Site is an operating cattle ranch that demonstrates and preserves the heritage of ranching. It’s located about 80 miles southeast of Missoula and includes buildings, furnishings, decor, operations, skills and records.

The first owner of the ranch was Johnny Grant who recognized that horses and cattle could graze all winter in the valley that became Deer Lodge. Grant’s father was a Canadian fur trader and his mother was of Indigenous and Euro-American ancestry. Grant was married to a woman who was Lemhi Shoshone. Between 1862 and 1866 he built a house which also served as a trading post.

Johnny and Quadra Grant’s house

Grant traded cattle with emigrants on the Oregon Trail: He would exchange one fit animal for two that were weary and depleted from travel. In this way he quickly built his herd. New settlers moved to Deer Lodge and Grant became discouraged by their racial discrimination and shady business practices. In 1866 he sold the house and ranch to Conrad Kohrs for $19,200 and returned to Canada.

Kohrs presided over the ranch at a time when the open range was ending. Barbed wire had reduced the available range and it became necessary to produce and harvest quality hay. He lost 60% of his valley herd in the hard winter of 1886-87. He added a brick wing behind the Grant house in 1890.

Rear of the Kohrs addition to the ranch house

Kohrs sold the ranch to his nephew Conrad Warren in 1940. Warren raised prize-winning Hereford cattle and Belgian horses. The National Park Service began acquisition of the site from Warren in 1970, agreeing to continue ranching operations.

Barn
Stalls
Horseshoes and tack
Bunkhouse
Sleeping area for ranch hands.
Bunkhouse kitchen
Ranch office
Blacksmith shop
Chuck wagon
Wagon purchased by Johnny Grant in 1862. It was brought up the Missouri River by steamboat. It was used as an ambulance at the Battle at Big Hole in 1877 and took the Kohrs family on a 7-week trip to Yellowstone in 1883.
Ranchers in the area used a Beaverslide to stack 20 tons of hay. Winter feed for a cow is one and a half tons and for a horse is two tons.
Ranch scene
Categories: Travel

2 Comments

Susan · August 9, 2021 at 7:24 am

That brick addition looks 3-4 times bigger than the house. Quite impressive

    Jane Appel · August 9, 2021 at 12:26 pm

    Unfortunately, tours aren’t available now as they are working inside. But, yes, by all accounts the house is magnificent and is furnished with pieces owned by the Grant and Kohrs families. Many times the original furnishings are lost and pieces “typical” of the period are used so this house is extra special.

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