Johnny Francis Grant was born at
Fort Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. His mother died when he was only three years old, so he was sent to
Trois-Rivières, Quebec, to be raised by his grandmother. His father, Captain Richard Grant, was a
Hudson's Bay Company employee, and therefore, in his mid-teens, he left for
Fort Hall, Idaho, to meet up with his father. There he learned the trading business. However, in the 1840s the fur trade was dying out, so Johnny Grant and his brother James turned to trading with
emigrants traveling west along the
Oregon Trail. He made a considerable profit by trading travelers one healthy
cow or
horse for two trail-wearied ones. He then fed and rested the tired animals and the following season traded them again. This is how he got into the
cattle business. Grant started using the
Deer Lodge Valley in 1857 to graze his cattle during the winter along the banks of the
Clark Fork river near Cottonwood creek. In 1859 he decided to permanently locate a ranch and constructed a permanent residence in 1862. He convinced traders to settle around him, forming the town of Cottonwood (later to become Deer Lodge). Johnny was initially successful, but found that when gold miners arrived in the area, he was at a disadvantage, because he spoke
French and the newcomers spoke
English. He was taken advantage of in contracts and felt that he could no longer be successful in the area. In August 1866, he sold his ranch to a
cattle baron,
Conrad Kohrs, for $19,200 and returned to
Canada. ==Conrad Kohrs home ranch (1866–1887)==