Browse Items (8833 total)

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/066729442eada4392eaa3f2a8a3148bc.jpeg
An 1881 County and Township map by S.A. Mitchell of Philadelphia. Seven counties are shown in Wyoming, the map not reflecting that the legislative assembly had changed the name of Pease Country to Johnson, two years earlier. Fort Mc Kinney is…

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/b4ed4a93aa95ddc50af6932d2e795417.jpeg
From an atlas produced by S. Augustus Mitchell of Philadelphia. This 1870 rendering reflects the construction of the Denver Pacific Railroad, joining the Union Pacific at Cheyenne, from the south.

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/f333d31a89fd61eef39d8274262eb244.jpeg
The eleven counties of Wyoming territory as they appeared from 1888 to 1890, when Weston and Big Horn counties were formed.

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/f2d6a2c151c0f731674745915f157630.jpeg
This circa 1900 map by George F. Cram of Chicago reflects railroad development in Wyoming. The Burlington and Missouri Valley built across Weston County in 1889. The Union Pacific from Cheyenne north to Wendover and the Oregon Short Line from Granger…

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/1749a68f0e3bc159870100baf03e2cf0.jpeg
A map of the 13-county configuration which existed for nineteen years, from 1890 to 1909. The map shows the Fremont, Elkhorn, and Missouri Valley Railroad (later the Chicago Northwestern) to Casper, but short of its eventual terminus of Lander.

https://casperomeka.libraryhost.com/files/original/f351b44365ced07c6c89a3976e9b81d9.jpeg
For the fourteen-month period from March 2, 1863, to May 26, 1864, the area that is now Wyoming was part of Idaho territory. On the same 1864 date, Montana became a territory. Sparse population made these jurisdictional changes of little importance.
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