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Fort Laramie: Goshen County: 1834 Historic [7] Fort Steele [2] Gebo: Hot Springs County: Hecla: Laramie County: Horton Jay Em: Goshen County [1] Jeffrey City: Fremont County: Jireh A planned college town that never took off. [1] Kane: Big Horn County: Kirwin: Park County: Historic [4] Linwood: Daggett County: On the Wyoming-Utah state line ...
The Lehman-Tunnell Mansion, also known as the Tunnell House, is a Queen Anne style residence located in Laramie, Wyoming.Constructed in 1891, this house reflects the popularity of Queen Anne architecture during the late 19th century and is characterized by its asymmetrical design, conical roof, bowed windows, and corbeled chimney.
Location of Laramie County in Wyoming. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Laramie County, Wyoming. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Laramie County, Wyoming, United States. The locations of National Register properties and ...
One of the state's best-known haunted sites, Union Cemetery in Easton has drawn visits from the New England Society for Psychic Research and inspired a book, "Graveyard: True Hauntings from an Old ...
House of Pedro Benedit Horruytiner, colonial governor of Florida, in St. Augustine. Alleged encounters with the Horruytiner ghost, as well as that of a cat supposedly killed in the house, have been reported there. [48] The Leaf Theater in Quincy reportedly is haunted by several former movie operators and theater attendees. [49]
Fort Sanders (Wyoming) Albany County, Wyoming: 1869 Fort Wyoming Territorial Penitentiary: Laramie, Wyoming: 1872 Penitentiary Jim Baker Cabin: Savery, Wyoming: 1873 Bath Ranch: Laramie, Wyoming: 1875 Residence Durlacher House: Laramie, Wyoming: 1875-1878 Residence Queen Anne style house built by German immigrants. [3] Old Main (University of ...
The Bath Ranch, also known as the Bath Brothers Ranch and the Stone Ranch, was established near Laramie, Wyoming by Henry Bath about 1869-70. It was one of the first ranches in Albany County. The initial homestead was replaced by the present stone house and barn in 1875, using stone quarried locally by Henry and his sons.
The John D. Conley House was built in 1888 in Laramie, Wyoming for University of Wyoming professor John Dykeman Conley (1843–1926). In 1890 Conley became acting president of the university, serving until 1891 when he reverted to a professorship and sold the house to an eventual president, Elmer E. Smiley.