Whitetail: almost another Soo Line ghost town in northeast Montana

Town sign 2013

I last visited Whitetail ten years ago. Established along the Canadian-based Soo Railroad line a century earlier, the town was in a free fall, from a height of 500 c. 1920 to a handful of families in 2010. Then the Canadian, then the U.S. government closed the border crossing between 2011 and 2013. Now the town is down to a population of nine in 2020. God bless those still there, doing what they can.

The school building tells much of the story. Built when hopes for the town were high in the 1920s, it’s two-story height and bell cupola made it a landmark in the flat open terrain. I hope when I visit next, the school is there, a silent statement of the dreams with which our high plains were settled.

Secure in its concrete base, the old school bell, removed 50 years ago, is still there to ring, or so I can hope.

The community church, still a gathering place or has it gone the way of the Catholic Church, moved to the Daniels County Museum in Scobey?

Grain Company Building
Gas station and Garage, 2013
Abandoned businesses, 2013
A metal facade and open door marked what was left of the Whitetail Theater.

Businesses were largely gone ten years ago. But the post office and grain elevators remained. I bet the elevators are still there serving ranch families but you wonder about the post office.

Whitetail in Montana’s northeast corner is as far removed from Whitefish in Montana’s northwest corner as two places could ever be. They both began as railroad towns. One didn’t make it; the other thrives.

Abandoned home at Whitetail

But what’s been lost at Whitetail tells as much about history as what has been gained in Whitefish. You cannot understand Montana history without both.

Soo Line corridor at Whitetail

2 thoughts on “Whitetail: almost another Soo Line ghost town in northeast Montana

  1. My Grandmother Edithe’s parents lived in Whitetail, raising children in the area. Edithe’s father was the bus driver, in winter it was a horse drawn snow sled with a heater in the middle. Life was tough there, they decided to leave to establish their home in the Troy area to work the railroad and break horses.

    Thank you for these photos of histories of our small towns in Montana!! My family (Holt) came in 1864 and preserving and promoting Montana history is so important!!

    warm regards,

    Stacy

  2. Unfortunately Whitetail is turning into a ghost town like lots of towns in northeast Montana like Peerless, Flaxville, Outlook, and Redstone. I sure miss the 70’s when the towns were thriving when in school and basketball.

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