Big Sky, Montana
406-995-2160
Historic Crail Ranch is operated and administered by the Big Sky Community Corporation, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization which exists to promote, acquire, preserve, and maintain land, parks, trails, and easements for the use of the people of the Big Sky Community and general public.
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A Timeline History of the Crail Ranch
November 18, 1842 Augustus Franklin Crail born in Decatur County, Indiana to Samuel Spencer Crail II and Catherine Weaver

1862
Homestead Act signed into law by President Lincoln, basically giving people who move into western territories the right to 160 acres of land for free. Prospective homesteader must:
   - be head of household or 21 years old
   - pay a small filing fee (approximately $10)
   - live on the land, "put down a house" (no size requirement)
    - improve the land (e.g., plant a crop)
 After 5 years, having met the above requirements, the homesteader takes two witnesses to the state capital and "proves up," giving him or her title to the land.

1863
Gold rush in Montana

January 20, 1864
Sallie L. Creek (later Sallie Creek Crail) is born.

May 26, 1864
Montana becomes an incorporated territory of the United States

1865
Augustus Franklin Crail leaves Tipton County, Indiana and comes to Montana via wagon train from St Joseph, Missouri. Within a few years, he establishes a homestead in the current Springhill section of Bozeman. Later he leases his land and works as a freighter between Miles City and Fort Benton, Montana.

1868
Homesteading begins in earnest in the Montana Territory

1869
The Union Pacific rail line reaches Corrine, Utah. Augustus Franklin Crail is involved in transporting freight to, from and within Montana
.
1880
Utah & Northern Railroad enters Montana. Other forms of transportation in those days:
- Stage lines (Wells Fargo)
- Overland mail and express
- Ferries
- Steamers on the Missouri River (Fort Benton)
- Wagons, horses

1886
Augustus Franklin Crail marries Sallie L. Creek

August 4, 1887
Eugene Crail, oldest son of Augustus Franklin and Sallie Crail, is born in Bozeman, Montana Territory

August 26, 1888
Emmett Crail, second son of Augustus Franklin and Sallie Crail, is born at "Springhill" in Bozeman, Montana Territory.

November 8, 1889
Montana becomes the 41st state

1896 - 1900
Augustus Franklin Crail serves as Clerk of the 9th District Court in Bozeman
 
January 7, 1896
Lilian Crail, daughter of Augustus Franklin and Sallie Crail is born in Bozeman.

1898
First homesteaders move into Gallatin Canyon near what is now Big Sky, Montana.

December 1901
Augustus Franklin Crail purchases 160 acre homestead in what is now Big Sky meadow areas from Daniel Inabnit for about $1 per acre. Land includes a small cabin.

1902 - 1914
In spring of 1902, Augustus Franklin Crail with his wife Sallie, sons Eugene (age 14) and Emmett (age 13), and daughter Lilian (age 6) move to the homestead in what is now the meadow section of Big Sky, Montana. They initially occupy the small cabin on the homestead but soon build a larger cabin and eventually expand the cabins and add a workshop, forge, hay barn, and a spring house over the creek for cold storage. The Crails raise wheat, cattle, horses, and sheep. Hay is stacked and stored by means of a "beaver slide" frame (which still found in the Hamilton area of Montana). Sallie Crail works on quilts now in possession of Historic Crail Ranch.

September 7, 1914
Sallie Creek Crail dies in Bozeman at age 50. She is interred in the Sunset Hills Cemetery in Bozeman.

1914 - 1924
- Son Eugene Crail becomes a  carpenter. He is drafted into the Army in 1918 and serves in England during WWI. Upon return, he practices carpentry trade in Bozeman and the Gallatin Valley
- Son Emmett Crail remains on the ranch with his father
- Daughter Lilian Crail completes nursing school in Chicago and resides there

September 4, 1924
Augustus Franklin Crail dies of heart failure at the Crail Ranch at the age of 82. He is buried in the Sunset Hills Cemetery in Bozeman. Crail Ranch passes to his sons, daughter Lilian having received her share several years earlier in the form of tuition to nursing school.

1924 - 1949        
- Eugene moves to Bozeman and is a successful carpenter building the first Ophir school, structures at the B-K Ranch (later Lone Mountain Ranch), Presbyterian Camp, and other structures in Bozeman and Gallatin County. He marries Mary Alice Fowler Phillips, a widow with two boys. At 48 years of age, Eugene fathers a son, Francis William Crail, the only biological grandchild of Frank Crail. During WWII Eugene moves to Port Angeles, Washington.
- Emmett remains on the Crail Ranch continuing wheat farming, raising milk cows, and other operations. He serves on the school board.
- Lilian lives and works for a time in Chicago and then moves to Long Beach, California where she marries Lockheed engineer Hal DeWaide.

June 1949
Emmett, age 60, marries longtime friend Anaconda schoolteacher Annie Breneman, age 63. They live at the Crail Ranch for a short time and then move to Bozeman Hot Springs.

1950
Emmett sells Crail Ranch to Jack and Elaine Hume. The Ranch has grown to 960 acres. Humes add indoor plumbing and move the small cabin from its original location west of the main cabin to its present position.

1962
Sam Smeding acquires the Crail Ranch and uses it as a base to run cattle in what is now the Big Sky golf course.

1970
Retired TV newscaster Chet Huntley and his consortium purchase the Crail Ranch and property for what will become Big Sky Resort.

Summer 1970
Frank Crail, grandson of the original homesteaders, visits the Crail Ranch with his father Eugene, uncle Emmett, and aunt Lilian. It is the last time that the children of the original homesteaders see the Crail Ranch.

1970 - 1980
Crail Ranch buildings are used as temporary lodging for resort workers.

June 4, 1975
Emmett Crail dies at Deaconess Hospital in Billings, Montana at age 86. He is interred in the Breneman plot  in the Sunset Hills Cemetery in Bozeman, near the grave of his wife Annie Breneman Crail (who died in 1958)

March 26, 1981
Lilian Crail DeWaide dies in Salem, Oregon at age 85. Her remains are interred in the DeWaide family mausoleum in Long Beach, California

April 15, 1982
Historic Crail Ranch is listed on the National Register of Historic Places through efforts of a group of Big Sky residents.

February 26, 1985
Eugene Crail dies in Oregon at age 97 and is interred at Belcrest Memorial Park, Salem, Oregon. At the time of his death he has been a member of the Carpenter's Union for 80 years.

1997
The Big Sky Resort formally turns over the Crail Ranch buildings and about 1 acre of land to the non-profit Big Sky Community Corporation for maintenance as a community resource.

July 2001
Historic Crail Ranch is opened for public tours in the summer months.

July 2004
Frank Crail, son of Eugene Crail and grandson of the original homesteaders, visits the Historic Crail Ranch and entrusts to the Big Sky Community Corporation a number of artifacts, photographs, and documents from the Crail family. He also meets for the first time with members of the Crail family from Indiana.

2006
Historic Crail Ranch Conservators are chartered as a committee of the Big Sky Community Corporation with the mission to preserve and maintain the Historic Crail ranch as an educational resource and center for community activities.

-- Assembled in October 2009 from sources that include research conducted by Anne Marie Mistretta, PhD, Barbara Hoberecht , and Al Lockwood of the Historic Crail Ranch Conservators.
Open to visitors
July - August
Saturdays & Sundays
12 noon - 3:00 PM
FREE TOURS
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