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  1. Cheyenne Frontier Days takes place each summer during the last full week in July. The History of The Daddy of 'em All. Since 1897 Cheyenne Frontier Days has been kicking up dust with the world's largest outdoor rodeo and Western Celebration. Celebrating our Western Roots with a festival unlike any other!

  2. Cheyenne is an American Western television series of 108 black-and-white episodes broadcast on ABC from 1955 to 1962. The show was the first hour-long Western, and was the first hour-long dramatic series of any kind, with continuing characters, to last more than one season. It was also the first series to be made by a major Hollywood film ...

  3. Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo - 9 DAYS of ACTION-PACKED EVENTS - July 20-29, 2018 - BAREBACK RIDING, SADDLE BRONC RIDING, BULL RIDING, STEER WRESTLING, TIE DOWN ROPING, TEAM ROPING, BARREL RACING, WILD HORSE RACE - Award Winning

  4. Things To Do In Cheyenne 1. The Cheyenne Street Railway Trolley. I recommend starting your visit with the Cheyenne Street Railway Trolley.On this 90-minute tour, a knowledgeable guide will drive you through town in a comfortable red trolley bus, calling out historic buildings and other points of interest while sharing the town’s history.

  5. 9. Cheyenne Frontier Days Old West Museum. Known as "The Daddy of 'em All," Cheyenne Frontier Days is the world's largest outdoor rodeo and Western celebration. Started in 1897, it features 10 days of the world's best PRCA rodeo action - from bull riding and barrel racing, to steer wrestling and team roping.

  6. The rodeo features 10 rodeo events and track acts in a fast-paced display of athletics, heroics and good-natured fun. That Cheyenne sun is fierce and hot, so plan on wearing a cowboy or baseball hat to shield your face, and plenty of sunscreen for any exposed skin! For information, call 307-778-7200. To get tickets, visit Cheyenne Frontier Days ...

  7. Cheyenne, capital (since 1869) and largest city of Wyoming, U.S., and seat of Laramie county, in the southeastern corner of the state, on Crow Creek, 49 miles (79 km) east of Laramie city; it sprawls over high prairie that slopes westward to the Laramie Mountains. Squatters arriving in 1867 just

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