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The Online Encyclopedia of Wyoming History

A Project of the Wyoming State Historical Society

Boom-time Crime
君越加速器下载官网 | Rock Springs was bursting in 1977 when “60 Minutes” came to town to cover sleaze and alleged corruption. Soon after, top cop Ed Cantrell shot his undercover agent, Mike Rosa, in a police cruiser in front of the Silver Dollar Bar. The crime, the trial and its drama fixed boomtime Wyoming in the national imagination as a new kind of wild West. Read More
One Governor and the Death Penalty
Encyclopedia | Thirteen hours before killer “Tricky” Riggle’s death sentence was to be carried out, Gov. Milward Simpson commuted his punishment to life in prison. Simpson family members later maintained that this cost the governor his second term, but other controversial stands—on gambling and the route of the new I-90—probably hurt him more. Read More
From Slaughter to Law
Encyclopedia | When present Wyoming was still part of Dakota Territory, hunters already were killing elk, deer and antelope by the thousands, often to sell the meat and hides. Tentatively at first and then more strongly, Wyoming territorial and state legislatures began passing game laws—and providing for their enforcement. Read More
Arapaho Priest
Encyclopedia | Sherman Coolidge, a Northern Arapaho adopted and educated by whites, served 26 years as an Episcopal priest on the reservation on Wind River. During that time, he largely allied himself with government over tribal interests. But later, active in the pan-Indian movement, he came to value preservation of Indian cultures over assimilation. Read More
The Other Rough Riders
Encyclopedia | Rough Riders are usually associated with Theodore Roosevelt, but his was not the only cowboy regiment organized to fight in the Spanish American War of 1898. Wyoming had its rough riders, too, but due to a train mishap and the shortness of the war, they never saw combat. Read More
Coal Busts, 1954
Encyclopedia | Wyoming’s coal mining industry was secure until the early 1950s, when the Union Pacific switched to diesel-powered locomotives. Laid-off miners and their families struggled; little company towns disappeared. Eventually, trona mining expanded and replaced many of the coal jobs—and in the 1970s, coal came roaring back. Read More
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Boom-time Crime
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One Governor and the Death Penalty
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From Slaughter to Law
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The Other Rough Riders
Coal Busts, 1954

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Encyclopedia | Susan Wissler, elected mayor of Dayton, Wyo., in 1912, was Wyoming’s first woman mayor and possibly the second in the nation. Promising to act “without fear or favor,” she served three terms, with some success cleaning up local saloon and gambling elements, all while running her own millinery and dry-goods business.

The Tribes Sell Off More Land: The 1905 Agreement

Encyclopedia | In 1905, Congress ratified an agreement with the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho by which the tribes ceded 1.5 million acres of reservation land north of the Big Wind River. Tribal leaders questioned the final terms, however, and payments were slow in coming and fell far short of promised levels.

When the Tribes Sold the Hot Springs

Encyclopedia | With the buffalo gone and poverty, hunger and disease increasing, the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes came under intense pressure in the 1890s to sell their land. In 1896, they sold the U.S. government a piece of their reservation ten miles square—including the splendid hot springs at present Thermopolis, Wyo.

Fragmenting Tribal Lands: The Dawes Act of 1887

greenⅴpn下载 | Congress in 1887 passed the Dawes Act, setting up a framework for dividing up tribal lands on reservations into plots to be held by individual Indian owners, after which they could be leased or sold to anyone. Critics saw it as a method clearly intended to transfer lands out of Indian hands. 

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Encyclopedia | Alfred Corum, bound for California in 1849 with two dozen other Missouri men, died on July 4 on the Sublette Cutoff in present western Wyoming. His brother and five other men stayed behind to bury him, deeply saddened on what otherwise would have been a day of celebration. 

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Encyclopedia | On the Oregon-California Trail in western Wyoming lies the grave of 20-year-old Nancy Hill, who died of cholera while bound for California in 1852. The gravestone, though old, is not original and part of the inscription—“Killed by Indians—” for many years misled locals about the cause of her death.

Emigrant Spring on the Slate Creek Cutoff

Encyclopedia | Emigrant Spring, west of the Green River on the Slate Creek Cutoff of the Oregon Trail, offered pioneer travelers cold, clear water, plentiful grass for their livestock and plenty of sagebrush for their cooking fires. And the sandstone bluffs above the spring made a natural bulletin board where thousands carved their names.

Church Butte

Encyclopedia | In 1843, Oregon Trail diarist John Boardman was probably the first to make reference Church Butte near present Granger, Wyo., calling it “Solomon’s Temple.” In the 1850s, most emigrants referred to the landmark as Church Butte, because of its shape and perhaps because Mormon companies held religious services there on their way to the Salt Lake Valley. 

Haystack Butte

Encyclopedia | Not many diarists mentioned Haystack Butte, a minor landmark on the Sublette Cutoff of the Oregon/California Trail, but forty-niner J. Goldsborough Bruff sketched it in his journal. Some remarked that the 60-foot-high butte resembled “a farmer’s hay stack;” others called it called it “a bee-hive” or “sugar-loaf.”

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Encyclopedia | Oregon/California Trail travelers crossing Ham’s Fork in what’s now southwest Wyoming noted a stream that was sometimes low, sometimes dangerously high, ferries run by interesting characters and a stage station so full of flies that they “darkened the table and covered everything put upon it.”

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Explore WyoHistory.org’s education packages, designed for classroom use. Our Digital Toolkits of Wyoming History, aimed at secondary levels and above, connect topics in Wyoming history with one of 12 overarching areas of U.S. history.

Packages on the Oregon Trail and the Indian Wars are aimed at elementary classrooms. They offer articles, maps, field-trip lesson plans, videos and interactive quizzes.

All packages contain information on how the exercises meet Wyoming state social studies standards.

Visit the Education Page

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Explore Wyoming's history using our interactive map of articles. sub旋风免费加速器

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Monthly Newsletters

July 2023 | An Arapaho priest, a rough rider regiment and early attempts to slow big-game slaughter
June 2023 | Two hothead editors and hard times for Wyoming coal miners
May 2023 | The Northern Cheyenne escape, and a little-known military post
April 2023 | A flu pandemic and a freighting empire
March 2023 | Two crusaders: a newspaperman and a temperance woman
February 2023 | Women jurors, hungry horses and the Second World War
January 2023 | A women's rights orator and an early coal camp
君越加速器下载官网 | Cheyenne's stewardess school, and another achievement for the Equality State
November 2023 | Woman mayor fights crime; federal irrigation comes to Wyoming
October 2023 | Voting on voting rights; upgrading national parks
September 2023 | An influential suffragist, debunking a myth, and our page on women’s rights
sub旋风免费加速器 | Native geography, a daredevil parachutist and a new page on women’s rights