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The climate of Cat Creek is semi-arid with a small annual rainfall, averaging {{convert|12|in}}. Although major rivers are present, secondary streams only in the nearby Big Snowy Mountains contain running water throughout most of the year. Extremes of temperature throughout the year range over 120°F.<ref>Reeves 1926, p. 41.</ref> The climate of Cat Creek is semi-arid with a small annual rainfall, averaging {{convert|12|in}}. Although major rivers are present, secondary streams only in the nearby Big Snowy Mountains contain running water throughout most of the year. Extremes of temperature throughout the year range over 120°F.<ref>Reeves 1926, p. 41.</ref>

The vegetation of the Cat Crek area is diverse with the plains areas featuring a sparse growth of buffalo grass, black sage and greasewood while on the northern bluffs, bull pine grow. Bluejoint grass, bull pine, Douglas fir and scrub cedar are found along the banks of larger streams in both shale and sandstone soil while cottonwood and willow grow on the bottom land of the rivers and larger creeks.<ref name="Reeves P. 40">Reeves 1926, p. 40.</ref>


==Industry== ==Industry==
Farming and ranching remains as a primary industry in the area, although a lengthy period of oil exploration and production was also part of the area's economy. An estimated 23 million barrels of oil have been produced from 150 oil wells in Cat Creek's 54-year oil production history. <ref name="Cheney p. 243"/><ref> ''Montana's Official State Travel Site.'' Retrieved: April 1, 2012.</ref>By 1975, the "oil boom" in Cat Creek had curtailed, with only 35 wells operating "on pump".<ref> ''Russell County, Montana,'' 2010.</ref> Dryland farming was the main occupation of Cat Creek since its founding. With irrigation, large crops of alfalfa, grain, vegetables, berries and even fruit, such as apples, cherries and plums, may be raised.<ref name="Reeves P. 40"/> Today, small numbers of isolated sheep and cattle ranches are found, with farming remaining the primary industry in the area. A lengthy period of oil exploration and production was also part of the area's economy. An estimated 23 million barrels of oil have been produced from 150 oil wells in Cat Creek's 54-year oil production history. <ref name="Cheney p. 243"/><ref> ''Montana's Official State Travel Site.'' Retrieved: April 1, 2012.</ref>By 1975, the "oil boom" in Cat Creek had curtailed, with only 35 wells operating "on pump".<ref> ''Russell County, Montana,'' 2010.</ref>


==History== ==History==

Revision as of 12:38, 3 April 2012

Unincorporated community in Montana, United States
Cat Creek
Unincorporated community
CountryUnited States
StateMontana
CountyPetroleum
Elevation2,907 ft (886 m)
Time zoneUTC-7 (Mountain (MST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-6 (MDT)
ZIP codes59087
Area code406
GNIS feature ID805516

Cat Creek (also Frantz or Frantzville) is an unincorporated community in eastern Petroleum County, Montana, United States. It lies along local roads east of the town of Winnett, the county seat of Petroleum County.

Geography

Cat Creek has a diversified topography, ranging from plains to "badlands". The altitude of the area ranges from 4,100 feet (1,200 m) at the top of gravel benches in the southwestern part of the area to 2,200 feet (670 m) feet at the mouth of Musselshell River with an average elevation of 2,907 feet (886 m). In areas adjoining Musselshell and Missouri Rivers, the surface is rugged, consisting of sandstone outcrop formations while the surrounding area varies from smooth, level, grass-covered gravel benches to the rough, uneven, sagebrush-covered plains, broken by numerous gullies, valleys and streams. The topography features hogbacks of sandstone escarpments and small dome-shaped buttes of igneous rocks.

The climate of Cat Creek is semi-arid with a small annual rainfall, averaging 12 inches (300 mm). Although major rivers are present, secondary streams only in the nearby Big Snowy Mountains contain running water throughout most of the year. Extremes of temperature throughout the year range over 120°F.

The vegetation of the Cat Crek area is diverse with the plains areas featuring a sparse growth of buffalo grass, black sage and greasewood while on the northern bluffs, bull pine grow. Bluejoint grass, bull pine, Douglas fir and scrub cedar are found along the banks of larger streams in both shale and sandstone soil while cottonwood and willow grow on the bottom land of the rivers and larger creeks.

Industry

Dryland farming was the main occupation of Cat Creek since its founding. With irrigation, large crops of alfalfa, grain, vegetables, berries and even fruit, such as apples, cherries and plums, may be raised. Today, small numbers of isolated sheep and cattle ranches are found, with farming remaining the primary industry in the area. A lengthy period of oil exploration and production was also part of the area's economy. An estimated 23 million barrels of oil have been produced from 150 oil wells in Cat Creek's 54-year oil production history. By 1975, the "oil boom" in Cat Creek had curtailed, with only 35 wells operating "on pump".

History

In late 1919, the Frantz Corporation began oil exploration on a creek near Winnett, Montana, flowing into the Musselshell River. The first major commercial oil field discovery in Montana was at the West Dome of the Cat Creek field, Eastern Fergus County, at a depth of 1,015 feet (309 m). The oil was considered "the highest grade of oil known to any oil fields." The discovery well was showing oil in November 1919 and put into full use by the Frantz Corporation on February 19, 1920.

Curley Meek, one of the first drillers in the Cat Creek area, stated that "there was no place to store the oil, so it was dammed up in a coulee and given away to ranchers and farmers as sheep and cow dip until they began using it in their cars." Due to a lack of storage facilities, the oil was directed into a coulee, where it became a tourist attraction; it was of such a high quality that tractors and Ford Model T automobiles could run on the oil directly from the ground, which was distributed free of charge to everyone. Storage tanks were soon constructed; during the summer of 1920, the Frantz Corporation constructed a 2 inches (51 mm) diameter pipeline to carry the oil to Winnett.

By May 1920, production from one well, drilled to a depth of 660 feet (200 m), had reached up to 200 barrels a day. In April 1921, 30 producing wells were at work. As many as 300 men lived in the area in tar paper shacks with company bunkhouses for single men, a company cook house, and a recreation hall. In the town that sprang up, only a post office, church, school and cemetery provided services. A post office was established in Cat Creek in 1922, remaining active until 1996.

The area surrounding Cat Creek is very isolated; supplies were hauled to the site from Winnett, 20 miles (32 km) to the west of the area. Winnett also became the supply depot for mining activities, and the Midwest Refining Company pumped oil through a 4 inches (100 mm) pipe to the railhead there, where it was shipped by rail to refineries in Wyoming.

With the continued development of the Cat Creek oil fields and the resultant increase in the area's population, the Montana legislature voted to form a new county, sectioned off from eastern Fergus County. Petroleum County officially became Montana's 56th and final county in February 1925.

The Elk Basin Consolidated Petroleum Company later sold the Cat Creek field to Mutual Oil Company of Casper, Wyoming for $450,000. In turn, Mutual Oil sold the field to Continental Oil, an oil distributor from Ogden, Utah. After the lucrative oil wells stopped producing in 1975, the community of Cat Creek began to deteriorate as jobs also dried up, with an estimate population of only 340 (2004) in the Cat Creek area.

References

Notes
  1. The Elk Basin Consolidated Petroleum Company owned controlling interest in the Frantz Corporation, which in turn, used the Anaconda Copper Company as its drilling operation.
  2. The rich oil find in Cat Creek led to a scandal involving Secretary of the Interior Albert Bacon Fall. In 1922, Fall, gave the Lewistown Oil and Refining Co. a contract to buy the government's Cat Creek royalty oil, including a secret option to renew their contract after five years. The contract was eventually deemed illegal.
  3. Although the post office and recreational hall remained in use, most of the townsite was abandoned after 1975; the recreational hall collapsed in 2011.
Citations
  1. ^ "Cat Creek, Montana". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. Rand McNally 2008 Road Atlas: United States, Canada, Mexico 2007, p. 61.
  3. Reeves 1926, pp. 40–41.
  4. Reeves 1926, p. 41.
  5. ^ Reeves 1926, p. 40.
  6. ^ Cheney 1983, p. 243.
  7. "Cat Creek." Montana's Official State Travel Site. Retrieved: April 1, 2012.
  8. "Cat Creek, Montana Community Information." Russell County, Montana, 2010.
  9. ^ "Anaconda Copper Gets Oil in Cat Creek Field." The Deseret News, September 30, 1920.
  10. "Early development of the Cat Creek Oil Fields." Montana History, August 2008. Retrieved: April 1, 2012.
  11. Stout 1921, p. 877.
  12. Stout 1921, p. 716.
  13. Stout 1921, p. 387.
  14. The Great Falls Tribune (Montana), February 23, 1964.
  15. Pages of Time: A History of Petroleum County, Montana 1990, p. 140.
  16. "National Affairs: Cat Creek." Time, September 3, 2011.
  17. Stout 1921, pp. 716–717.
  18. ^ "Cat Creek." Ultimate Montana.com. Retrieved: April 1, 2012.
  19. "Montana Oil." Montana Pioneer and Classic Auto Club. Retrieved: March 23, 2012.
  20. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cat Creek Post Office
  21. Cheney 1983, p. 38.
  22. ^ "Cat Creek." Montana in Pictures. Retrieved: April 1, 2012.
  23. Patera, Alan H. "Cat Creek, Montana." Western Places: A Chronicle of Western Settlement, Winter 1993, p. 41.
  24. Cheney 1983, p. 207.
  25. Haines and Pike 2004, p. 24.
Bibliography
  • Cheney, Roberta Carkeek. Names on the Face of Montana: The Story of Montana's Place Name. 2nd ed. Missoula: Montana, 1990. ISBN 978-0878421503.
  • Haines, Leslie and William Pike, eds. Oil & Gas in the Rockies: Wildcatters and Legends. Houston: Hart Energy, 2004.
  • Pages of Time: A History of Petroleum County, Montana. Lewistown: Petroleum County Public Library, 1990. ISBN 978-1560440659.
  • Rand McNally 2008 Road Atlas: United States, Canada, Mexico. Chicago: Rand McNally, 2007. ISBN 978-0528939662.
  • Reeves, Frank. Geology of the Cat Creek and Devils Basin Oil Fields and Adjacent Areas in Montana. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Geological Survey, 1926.
  • Stout, Tom, ed. Montana: Its Story and Biography, A History of Aboriginal and Territorial Montana and Three Decades of Statehood, Volume 1. Chicago: American Historical Association, 1921.
Municipalities and communities of Petroleum County, Montana, United States
County seat: Winnett
Town
Petroleum County map
Unincorporated
communities
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