...and accompanying the history lesson is an map of the area with a
You Are Here arrow, just in case you weren't completely certain. BTW, this is a good place to stop for a picnic lunch while passing through, one reason being that there's an Ice Cream Parlor beside the park. Though it's a small park, it has a couple of shaded picnic tables, some landscaping and a grassy area to stretch out upon.
Wild Horse Plains is nestled in a circular valley at an elevation of 2,450 ft., drained by the Clark Fork River. Between 70,000 and 130,000 years ago the Bull Lake ice age glaciers dammed the Clark Fork River Valley creating Glacial Lake Missoula. All of the waters of the Clark Fork drainage backed up to form a Lake. When the ice dam broke, the Clark Fork River carried more water than the combined flow of all of the streams of the world.
In the early 1800s Native American tribes traveled through the area. The fertile valley was used for wintering their ponies, harvesting salmon, and holding great councils. Mountain men, trappers, surveyors, and map makers were soon to follow.
White settlers began their movement into the valley in the late 1860s. During the decades to follow farming, ranching, and lumbering would flourish in the valley.
The Northern Pacific Railway arrived in 1881-1883 and the town began to increase in size and importance. Businesses flourished and eventually the name was shortened to Horse Plains and finally to Plains.
From the Plaque