The Little Butte Creek area was originally settled by the
Takelma, and possibly the
Shasta tribe of
Native Americans. The first non-
indigenous settlers arrived in the Eagle Point region in 1852. Little Butte Creek was named by the early settlers for its close proximity to Mount McLoughlin (also known as Snowy Butte), as was nearby Big Butte Creek. Due to
conflicts with the
Rogue River Indians,
Major J. A. Lupton gathered 35 men from
Jacksonville on October 8, 1855, and attacked the Native Americans near the mouth of Little Butte Creek, killing about 30 of them. Lupton was also killed, and eleven of his men were injured. On December 24 of the same year, Captain Miles Alcorn discovered and attacked a Native American camp on the north fork, killing eight. On
Christmas, the following day, another band of Native Americans were attacked near Little Butte Creek's mouth; some fled, while the rest were either captured or killed. By the late 1850s, the land was primarily used for
agriculture and
lumber in the upper regions. A
sawmill was constructed on the north fork in the 1870s. In 1901, the Sunnyside Hotel was built by Alfred Howlett on the banks of the creek in Eagle Point. Eagle Point was later
incorporated in 1911, and remains the only incorporated town in the watershed. In 1917,
manganese ore was discovered near the confluence of South Fork Little Butte Creek and its tributary, Lost Creek. Mined
nodules consisted of approximately 55 percent manganese and weighed up to .
Cinnabar was also discovered in the area. In 1922, the
Antelope Creek Covered Bridge was constructed on Antelope Creek. It was moved to Little Butte Creek in Eagle Point in 1987.
Diversions and dams Some of the water in the Little Butte Creek watershed is diverted to irrigate the
Rogue Valley and to supplement
Bear Creek, both roughly to the southwest. In the late 19th century, a large number of
orchards were planted near
Ashland. They were initially irrigated by Bear Creek; however, there was not enough water to satisfy the orchards' needs. In 1898, the Fish Lake Water Company was established to solve the problem. The company proposed the enlargement of
Fourmile and Fish lakes by impounding Fourmile Creek and North Fork Little Butte Creek, respectively, and connecting them via the
Cascade Canal. Construction of the temporary Fish Lake Dam began in 1902. Around this time, construction of the Joint System Canal to the west also began. Construction of Fourmile Lake Dam started in 1906, along with the Cascade Canal. A network of other small canals, such as Hopkins Canal and the Medford Canal, were also built in the Rogue Valley around this time. Fish Lake Dam was completed in 1908, creating the reservoir. The Cascade Canal was completed in 1915, delivering about of water from Fourmile Lake in the Klamath River watershed southwest to Fish Lake in the Rogue River watershed. The temporary Fish Lake Dam was also replaced by a permanent
earthfill dam. It was later modified in 1922 and 1955. In 1996 an auxiliary
spillway was added. The dam stands high and has a length of . In 1956, the
United States Bureau of Reclamation awarded a contract to
Portland, Oregon-based Lord Brothers to build the Deadwood Tunnel. The tunnel was finished in 1957.
Howard Prairie Lake was completed in 1958, and is about east of Ashland. Excess water is diverted from the South Fork, Beaver Dam Creek, and two of its tributaries south into the Deadwood Tunnel to supplement the lake and the surrounding regions. Dead Indian Creek is also diverted into Howard Prairie Lake. About annually, or about , was diverted into the Klamath River watershed between 1962 and 1999. The Howard Prairie Delivery Canal was completed in 1959, along with Keene Creek Reservoir, Cascade Tunnel, and Greensprings Tunnel. Water from Howard Prairie Lake is diverted into the canal west to Keene Creek Reservoir, about east of Ashland. Nearby
Hyatt Reservoir also provides water. It is then piped through the mile-long Cascade Tunnel to the Greensprings Power Plant, which generates about 18
megawatts of power. Afterward, the water is conveyed from the power plant through the Greensprings Tunnel into Emigrant Creek, a tributary of Bear Creek. An average of approximately of water flows through the tunnel. The water eventually ends up in
Emigrant Lake, about southeast of Ashland, where it either continues along Bear Creek, or is diverted for irrigation.
Butte Creek Mill The Butte Creek Mill, originally named Snowy Butte Mill, was built in 1872 on the banks of Little Butte Creek about from its mouth. A
diversion dam was built in the 1880s to provide water for the
turbine that powers the mill. The dam was a damaging fish barrier in the watershed. In 2005, the Rogue Basin Fish Access Team built a $250,000 concrete
fish ladder to allow fish to swim past the dam. A small
weir made of boulders was built at the base of the ladder, creating a jump between the creek and the ladder; however, the boulders were washed away in a severe storm just three months later, making the distance between them over . The weir was rebuilt in 2008 for about $122,500, with concrete instead of boulders. The mill is now included on the
National Register of Historic Places, and is the only
gristmill in Oregon to still grind
flour. It is also the oldest water-powered gristmill west of the
Mississippi River. On Christmas morning, December 25, 2015, the store had a fire and was considered a total loss. There are plans to rebuild, which have been overtaken by a foundation dedicated to its reconstruction. In February 2021, the mill risked losing its ability to operate because of a possible sale of its water rights, which were ultimately sold to a conservation group which allowed the mill to operate while protecting local aquatic wildlife.
Restoration Intense flooding occurred throughout the
Rogue Valley in 1955, and Little Butte Creek's
meanders in the
Denman Wildlife Area between Eagle Point and the Rogue River were blamed for severe
erosion. The section of the creek was subsequently bulldozed and straightened in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The straightness forced water downward instead of outward like a typical creek, scouring the
stream bed down to
bedrock and creating an unsuitable habitat for wild salmon. In 2007, a plan to divert the creek back into its old meanders was proposed. The $700,000 project involved building engineered
riffles and
log jams and adding boulders, extending the creek by approximately . It was completed in September 2011. == Pollution ==