Aerial Photograph of Casper College Campus; Residence Hall, Goodstein Foundation Library, Union Building, Strausner, Leisinger, and Aley Halls, Erickson Thunderbird Gym, Werner Technical Center, etc.
Digitized copy of a photograph captured with a rotating camera depicting downtown looking west on 2nd Street, north on Center Street, and then east on 2nd. The original photograph was taken in 1920. It was gifted to the repository by Bernadine Reed…
Digitized version of a rotating photograph of downtown Casper, Wyoming. The photograph depicts views of Center and Second streets from south, west, north, and then east. The original photograph was taken by Jeffryes Studio in 1920.
John Conway, convicted of killing A. J. "Red Jack" Tidwell in Lou Polk's dance hall on September 20, 1890, stands in the doorway with Charles W. "Dad" Eads, founder of Eadsville, on guard duty.
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.
A map prepared by Lt. Warren, Army Topographical Engineer, to accompany a report to Congress on his mapping expedition of 1855 to the Dakotas, including portions of present-day Wyoming. Warren rose to the rank of Major General during the Civil War.
An article on the topic of how Governor Barrett and Herman Werner were born on the same day of the same year and how, in the author's words, "They celebrated the notable occasion together."
A recollection of "stray echoes" of the cattleman's war by Moreton Frewen, who was the head of the Powder River Cattle Company in the early 1980s. He wrote this recollection to S.P. Penton, an individual identified with the life insurance business in…