Augustus Franklin Crail
Augustus Franklin "Frank" Crail, was a Montana pioneer and homesteader, cattle rancher, developer of a unique strain of wheat, politician, and a 2013 Legacy Inductee into the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame.
Early years 1842–1900
Crail was born in 1842, the second of four children of an Indiana farming family. Evidence from his later life shows that he acquired useful skills in raising wheat, sheep, cattle and horses, and that he also knew cabinetry. In 1865, at the age of twenty-three, Crail left Indiana, traveled alone to the Missouri frontier, and then traveled by wagon train to the Montana Territory. By 1868, he was working in a quartz mine near Helena, Montana.Finding mining not to his liking, and finding freight hauling through Indian country too dangerous, Crail looked into the opportunities in homesteading based on the Homestead Act of 1862. In 1871, Crail partnered with two other ranchers and developed a homestead parcel in the Bridger Mountains, just north of the town of Bozeman in Gallatin County, Montana. Some of the original cabins and out buildings that Crail built on that land are still in existence.
In 1886, at age 44, Frank Crail met and married Sallie L. Creek, age 22, who had come to Bozeman with her family from Platte County, Missouri in about 1884. By 1896, Frank and Sallie had three children. Frank had left off farming and was serving as clerk of the Montana District Court for the Ninth District in Bozeman.
Gallatin Basin homestead 1902–1924
In December 1901, following an election in which he lost his clerkship, Crail purchased, for $150, rights to a 160-acre homestead parcel in the meadow area in the Gallatin Basin above Gallatin Canyon, and now the location of the Big Sky, Montana resort. In the spring of 1902, when nearly 60 years of age, Crail brought his family up the rough logging road along the Gallatin River and moved into a small cabin left by the previous developer of the parcel.Beginning in 1902, Frank Crail and his family proved up their original 160 acres and over the years expanded their holdings to 960 contiguous acres. By 1910, they had completed a two-story, four-room cabin and added numerous barns and outbuildings on the property. In the early years, the family raised horses and cattle and had a large hay-cutting operation for animal feed. Later on, Crail also raised sheep in the West Fork of the Gallatin drainage area.