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    • Wyoming - Frontier, Pioneers, Cowboys | Britannica

      1841 and 1868

      • After the discovery of the South Pass through the Rocky Mountains, as many as 400,000 emigrants crossed Wyoming between 1841 and 1868 on the Oregon, Overland, Mormon, Bozeman, and Bridger trails leading to what are now the present-day states of Oregon, Washington, Montana, Utah, and California.
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  2. Wyoming would become a U.S. state on July 10, 1890, as the 44th state. Native American settlement. There is evidence of prehistoric human habitation in the region known today as the U.S. state of Wyoming stretching back roughly 13,000 years.

  3. Before the boom turned to bust, South Pass City was Wyoming's largest settlement. Residents led the successful fight to grant women the right to vote and hold political office, making Wyoming the first official government in the world to grant women's suffrage.

  4. Nov 8, 2014 · Emigration routes were scouted by trappers, traders, the military and early pioneers in the 1810s-1840s. As the West was settled, destinations multiplied, necessitating a complex network of routes. Emigrants sought out better routes as the immense traffic on the main routes strained natural resources of the fragile steppes and desert.

  5. In November 1867 the first train of the Union Pacific Railroad reached Cheyenne and made the state accessible to settlers and visitors. Also that year Fort D.A. Russell (now Francis E. Warren Air Force Base) was built on the branch of the South Platte River, 3 miles (5 km) west of present-day Cheyenne.

  6. Statehood Wyoming became the 44th state of the Union on July 10, 1890.* Republican Francis E. Warren became the first state governor in September of that year. Settlers trekked to Wyoming and friction developed. Many settled on the prairies with small cattle herds, then fenced off their claims.

  7. Aug 3, 2015 · Monday, August 3, 2015. From 1847 to 1900, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) founded hundreds of settlements throughout Utah and the Intermountain West. One of the last places they settled was in the Bighorn Basin of northern Wyoming, where they established the towns of Byron and Cowley in the fall of 1900.

  8. May 26, 1990 · The 39 Church members who were called in October 1853 to build a permanent settlement near Fort Bridger were no strangers to Wyoming. Mormon pioneers had traversed Wyoming's plains and hills ever since 1847, the year the first Latter-day Saints entered the Salt Lake Valley.

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