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  1. The California Trail came into heavy use after the California Gold Rush enticed over 250,000 gold-seekers and farmers to travel overland the gold fields and rich farmlands of California during the 1840s and 1850s. Today, over 1,000 miles of trail ruts and traces can still be seen in the vast undeveloped lands between Casper, Wyoming, and the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Oregon_TrailOregon Trail - Wikipedia

    The Oregon Trail was a 2,170-mile (3,490 km) [1] east–west, large-wheeled wagon route and emigrant trail in the United States that connected the Missouri River to valleys in Oregon Territory. The eastern part of the Oregon Trail spanned part of what is now the state of Kansas and nearly all of what are now the states of Nebraska and Wyoming.

  3. Settlers trekked to Wyoming and friction developed. Many settled on the prairies with small cattle herds, then fenced off their claims. Some of these newcomers supplemented their herds by looting cattle from the established ranches run by cattle barons, which sparked the latter's fury. In southcentral Wyoming, the situation came to a head in 1892.

  4. Aug 1, 2016 · Making a Home in Empire, Wyo. Robert Galbreath. Monday, August 1, 2016. The plains of Wyoming and Nebraska are dotted with old cemeteries hidden in hay meadows or on vacant plots between county roads slicing the countryside in perfect, straight lines. Interred in the graves are thousands of settlers who came west at the turn of the 20th century ...

  5. Nov 13, 2020 · It was a sign of things to come. ... In 1590, the settlers of Roanoke—the first English colony in the New World—were discovered to be missing. The only clues: five buried chests and the word ...

  6. Feb 15, 2019 · Those settlers who did come had a hard time getting irrigation. In 1919, the Department of Interior’s Reclamation Service (soon renamed the Bureau of Reclamation) took over the most ambitious failed effort and built the “Riverton Project,” now the Midvale Irrigation District.

  7. Wyoming - Frontier, Pioneers, Cowboys: The first occupants of Wyoming were prehistoric hunters and gatherers who probably arrived from Siberia through Alaska more than 20,000 years ago. The total number of these peoples was never large, because they were highly dependent upon local game populations. By the time the first well-documented visits by “white” explorers to Wyoming occurred, the ...

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