Mount Idaho is a ghost town in Idaho County and served as county seat of Idaho County from 1875 to 1902.

A 45 mile  stretch of trail opened in 1860 in the Mount Idaho area is believed to be one of the earliest examples of a toll road on record in the region. According to local legend, the owner of this road, Mose Milner, was forced to sell the area to Loyal P. Brown after being permanently disabled in a fight with a Mountain Lion. Brown is considered the founder of Mount Idaho.

The town of Mount Idaho was founded around 1862 as an outpost serving nearby gold mining areas. By 1873 Mount Idaho was connected by stagecoach with Lewiston.

During the 1877 Nez Perce War a hotel in Mount Idaho served as a hospital. Some of the dead from that conflict were buried in the town's cemetery.

By 1892 Mount Idaho was in competition with nearby Grangeville, some 3.5 miles away, as the main town in Idaho County. The county seat was moved from Mount Idaho to Grangeville ten years later. By 1922, when the town's post office closed, Mount Idaho had been effectively assimilated by Grangeville

 
James Baker
Killed by Indians
June 15, 1877
Aged 74 Years
    




.      
 
1st Sgt.
H.A. Bishop
Company C
8th Iowa Infantry
     
 ghost town (noun): a once-flourishing town wholly or nearly deserted usually as a result of the failure of some economic activity. 

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Jeanette D. Manuel  Killed by Nez Perce Indians 
June  1877 Aged 28 Years                                                    
Mt. Idaho Cemetery
Mt. Idaho Cemetery (Masonic Lodge Cemetery)

Johnathan Chamberlin
b. October 8, 1847
He and his daughter Mattie  Aged 3, Years
Were Killed by the Nece Perce Indians
June 14 1877

My heart once heavy now at rest
My groans no more are heard
My___is___my grave you see
Prepare for death and follow me   
  
Jos K. Vincent  Company F
1st Oregon Cavarly   
 
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One of the most visible legacies left by any township is the  cemeteries.  These sacred grounds tell the story of these  forgotten communities.

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