The Emerson Parks house is a two-story log cabin located in Ten Sleep, Wyoming. The house is named for a distinguished former local resident, Emerson Parks (1887-1965), who was a geologist and cartographer.
Construction on the Frontier Prison began in 1888, but funding and weather concerns pushed the official opening of Cell Block A to 1901.
Willis Moses Spear established the Spear-O-Wigwam camp with his wife Virginia in 1923. Originally just a tent camp, the guest ranch grew to include 16 buildings.
The First Congregational United Church of Christ was built in 1911. This classic example of Gothic Revival architecture sits within the Sheridan Downtown Historic District.
The Loehr Residence is located in Laramie, Wyoming and is a contributing structure in Laramie’s West Side Neighborhood.
The Kearney Community Hall is a multi-use facility located in Johnson County that was used for reunions, dances, elections, meetings, and parties among many other community activities.
The conglomeration of structures on the Love Ranch Homestead was constructed by John David Love in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The statue of the 16th president sits at the highest point on Interstate 80 between Laramie and Cheyenne
Adobe Town once sat in the heart of the Red Desert
The Miller Barn is located on the prairie 20 miles north of Newcastle, Wyoming, close to Four Corners, Wyoming. The barn was built for Polish homesteaders Walentz Podlaszewski and Veronica Zwolkowski Podlaszewski around 1910.