
Montello Lake is formed from the Montello River which flows into the Fox River at what we now know as the City of Montello in Marquette County, Wisconsin. If you work your way back to the source of the Montello River, you’ll find it called Westfield Creek as well as the Crooked River. The little river is a hard worker, dammed in Westfield and generating power there for the Westfield Power Company and dammed also at Harrisville where it also generated power until recently. The Montello dam today, generates power for North American Hydro.
The Montello River runs along what was once the edge of a retreating glacier that covered part of Wisconsin and most of Marquette County about 12,000 years ago. It runs through land once covered with glacial Lake Oshkosh as well, formed as the glacier retreated. On the east side of today’s lake, parts of the shores are made up of extremely sandy and fast draining areas that are called outwash fans, places where the ice got “stuck” as it retreated and poured sand out under the 500 foot high edge of the ice.
The confluence of the Montello River and the Fox River drew early people to the area for its rich resources. Add to that a high, granite hill, that was quite probably a sacred ceremonial space, and it became an important location in the lives of pre-historic, archaic, woodland and Oneota cultures as well as historic tribes like the Ho-Chunk and Menominee.
For generations, Native Americans canoed the small river and walked and lived on its shores. It provided fish, shellfish, muskrats, and more food sources. The many springs along its shores, especially in its northern reaches, would have provided open water through a long winter.
An 1876 account of the history of Montello published in the Express newspaper, at that time the only paper in Marquette County, reports that Jason Daniels was the first actual settler in the area and that he built a log cabin by what is now the Montello River. Other sources say that he built a saw mill on the river. The first land claim was made by Josiah Dart in 1849. The very first beginnings of Montello Lake, then, began because of a settler’s saw mill. That first dam soon gave way to a larger dam that eventually provided power for a flour mill, woolen mill, power plant, and power for the grinding and cutting of Montello Granite. There would be no Montello Lake if it was not for the entrepreneurs and business men who settled at the confluence of the Montello and Fox Rivers.