Crook County

Contact

reflection of sunset on lake
Sunset over Ochoco Lake from Ochoco Lake County Park. (Oregon State Archives Photo)
County Seat: Courthouse, 300 NE Third St., Room 23, Prineville 97754
Phone: 541-447-6553 (General); 541-447-6555 (Court Administrator)
Fax: 541-416-2145

About 

​Established: Oct. 24, 1882
Elev. at Prineville: 2,868'
Area: 2,991 sq. mi.
Average Temp.: January 31.8° July 64.5°
Assessed Value: $2,653,128,811
Real Market Value: $4,545,656,769
(includes the value of non-taxed properties)
Annual Precipitation: 10.50"
Economy: Forest products, agriculture, livestock raising, recreation/tourism services, manufacturing and wholesale trade constitute most of Crook County’s economy

Related Resources

Oregon county map with Crook County shaded
"County QuickFacts" (population and economic data from U.S. Census Bureau)
County Seat Map (from Googe Maps)
County Map (from ODOT)

Incorporated Cities

Points of Interest

Pine Mills, Crooked River Canyon, Ochoco Mountains, Prineville and Ochoco Reservoirs, rockhound areas, county courthouse, Steins Pillar, Wildland Firefighters Monument, and geological formations

History and General Information 

Crook County was formed from Wasco County in 1882 and named for Major General George Crook, U.S. Army. Geographically, the county is in the center of Oregon. It is unique in that it has only one incorporated population center, the city of Prineville founded in 1868. Prineville’s colorful past was the scene of tribal raids, range wars between sheep and cattle ranchers and vigilante justice. Other communities in this sparsely settled region are Powell Butte, Post and Paulina.

Thousands of hunters, fishers, boaters, sightseers and rockhounds are annual visitors to its streams, reservoirs and the Ochoco Mountains. Rockhounds can dig for agates, limb casts, jasper and thundereggs on more than 1,000 acres of mining claims provided by the Prineville Chamber of Commerce. Major annual events include the Prineville Rockhound Powwow, Crooked River Roundup, Crook County Fair, Old Fashioned Fourth of July Celebration, High Desert Celtic Festival and the Lord’s Acre Sale.

County Officials

County Court—Judge Seth Crawford 2025, Brian Barney 2027, Jerry Brummer 2025; Dist. Atty. Kari Hathorn 2027; Assess. Jon Soliz 2027; Clerk Cheryl Seely 2027; Sheriff John Gautney 2025; Surv. Greg Kelso 2025; Treas. Galan Carter 2027​