Laramie’s Living History —
A Variety of Other Topics
A series of stories prepared for the Albany County Museum Coalition, an alliance of institutions that promote Laramie’s historic and cultural resources. This series originally appeared in the Laramie Boomerang.
Not all Albany County history falls into a specific category; a wide assortment of additional topics are covered on these pages.
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Transporting supplies by wagon— Early freighting in the Laramie area
Before there was a railroad in the Laramie Basin, goods were hauled by freighters who owned wagons and draft animals.
75 Years of “Jubilee”
In 1940, fifty years after Wyoming was admitted to the Union, the people of Laramie marked that anniversary with a 2-day celebration called “Equality Jubilee Days.”
Laramie—Lottery capital of Wyoming in 1875
A man named Pattee ran a lottery scheme in Laramie; was the scheme legal?
Kiwanis Springs: once a respite for thirsty cars and people in Telephone Canyon
In the 1920s, a Laramie Kiwanis Club member had an idea to develop a picnic area with a water fountain in Telephone Canyon. At that time, the “Lincoln Highway” was mostly unpaved, but the route through the canyon was the “improved” road to Laramie from Cheyenne, as opposed to the former auto route to Tie Siding and then back up to Laramie.
LARAMIE’S JULY 4th - 100 YEARS AGO
In 1917 Laramie folk's had learned of the horrors of World War I and the impact it would likely have on their community. But that did not stop them from living their daily lives, including a fine July 4th celebration.
Ice Skating on the Laramie River
There is an unmistakable sound a steel blade makes on solid ice—and an unmistakable smell of potatoes baking in their jackets in the coals of a big bonfire. Add the laughter of young people as they glide by teasing each other and you have the makings of an ice skating party—1870’s style, along the Laramie River.
Blizzard of ’49—Nothing Compares To It
In 1949, Albany County was savaged by a horrible blizzard.
Laramie Garden Club— Proving it Can be Done at 7220 feet
In the 1860s, pioneers brought seeds to Laramie—sharing cuttings and information on those that survived at our high elevation. Typical of these “heritage” plants are hollyhock, rhubarb, lilac, and yellow rose bushes that continue to thrive in Laramie.
The Plight of Widows
In post-Civil War America, widows whose late husbands were not military veterans usually remarried right away, moved in with one or another of their married children, were taken in by other relatives or became the responsibility of the county where they lived.
The Cooper legacy in Laramie—a nice house and dresses
Four elegant English dresses found their way to Laramie, probably in the 1920’s. Why they were brought here is lost to anyone’s recollection.
Laramie Fire Protection
In Laramie’s early days, fire protection provided by townspeople included barrels of water sitting around corners of buildings and on the roofs. In wintertime, the barrels probably had to go inside or were filled with sand. Blankets and carpets covered the roofs of nearby buildings in the event of a fire
Early health care in Laramie
The first people in the Laramie area in 1867-68 included a large number of young men. They lived in hastily-built barracks at Ft. Sanders or dormitories near the Union Pacific Railroad yards for workers.
Victorian Women: Notorious Bird-Killers
On the London feather market around 1900, an ounce of feathers was worth as much as an ounce of gold.
The Lincoln Highway Celebrates 100 Years
Owners of automobiles in Laramie dreamed about driving coast-to-coast in the early 1900s
Laramie’s First Motorized School Bus?
Was Laramie’s first school bus a Model T? We may never know for sure, but the Early family of Laramie claimed their mom was the first school bus driver, and that was her transportation.
Crossing the UPRR Tracks in Laramie
There was a time when Laramie residents took their lives in their hands to cross from one side of town to the other.
Mysterious “Cannonballs” Surface in Albany County
In central Albany County there is a geological feature that could easily fool laypersons into thinking they have stumbled upon an old military storehouse, dinosaur eggs, or a fascinating collection of geodes.
There’s a Story in the Furniture; If Only This Bed Could Talk
If it hadn’t been for Ragnhild “Ronnie” Solheim, some treasures from Laramie’s past might never have been saved. The Solheims came to Laramie in 1929, when her husband, Wilhelm, became a professor of Botany at UW. They rented several domiciles for 10 years, their last a furnished old house at 616 Ivinson Avenue.