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  2. Glenrock, Wyoming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenrock,_Wyoming

    On June 10, 1847, the first group of Mormons reached Deer Creek in the Glenrock region. A mere ten days later, a coal mine produced the first recorded coal mined in the Wyoming territory. Deer Creek Station. Originally, Deer Creek Station stood as a pioneer and Indian trading post in the 1850s and as a relay terminal for the overland stage line.

  3. Missing and murdered Indigenous women in Wyoming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missing_and_Murdered...

    The current Indigenous homicide rate in the state of Wyoming is higher than the national Indigenous homicide rate. In the years from 2000-2020, 105 Indigenous people were victims of homicide. 71 of them were male, and 34 females. Indigenous people make up 21% of homicide victims in Wyoming, but make up only 3% of the state's population.

  4. Crazy Woman Crossing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crazy_Woman_Crossing

    Added to NRHP. July 23, 1989. Crazy Woman Crossing is a historic place on the Bozeman Trail, in Johnson County, Wyoming, United States, about twenty miles southeast of Buffalo. Crazy Woman Crossing was one of three major fords used by travelers across creeks and rivers in this area. It is significant as the site of the Battle of Crazy Woman, a ...

  5. Converse County, Wyoming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Converse_County,_Wyoming

    At-large. Website. conversecounty .org. Dave Johnston power plant, a large coal-fired generating station at Glenrock, owned by PacifiCorp. Converse County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wyoming. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 13,751. [1] Its county seat is Douglas.

  6. Wyoming: A brief history of the first state where women could ...

    www.aol.com/news/wyoming-brief-history-first...

    Just look at Wyoming, where women gained the right to vote all the way back in 1869, a full 20 years before the territory became the country’s 44th state in 1890, and more than 50 years before ...

  7. Battle of Platte Bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Platte_Bridge

    8 killed. The Battle of Platte Bridge, also called the Battle of Platte Bridge Station, on July 26, 1865, was the culmination of a summer offensive by the Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne Indians against the United States army. In May and June the Indians raided army outposts and stagecoach stations over a wide swath of Wyoming and Montana.

  8. Wind River Indian Reservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_River_Indian_Reservation

    The Wind River Indian Reservation is the seventh-largest American Indian reservation in the United States by area and the fifth-largest [6] by population. The land area is approximately 2.2 million acres (3,438 sq mi; 8,903 km 2 ), and the total area (land and water) is 3,532.01 square miles (9,147.9 km 2 ).

  9. Indigenous peoples of the Great Basin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the...

    The "Great Basin" is a cultural classification of indigenous peoples of the Americas and a cultural region located between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada, in what is now Nevada, and parts of Oregon, California, Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah. The Great Basin region at the time of European contact was ~400,000 sq mi (1,000,000 km 2 ). [1]