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Wyoming is popularly known as the "Cowboy State," in part because of the use of the bucking bronco as its symbol. The University of Wyoming at Laramie athletic teams are nicknamed the Cowboys and Cowgirls, both of which use the bucking horse and rider logo on their uniforms.
Wyoming enacted the "Code of the West" as the State Code of Wyoming on March 3, 2010. [1] The code includes the following: Live each day with courage; Take pride in your work; Always finish what you start; Do what has to be done; Be tough, but fair; When you make a promise, keep it; Ride for the brand; Talk less, say more;
The following 89 pages use this file: 1992 Wyoming Cowboys football team; 1994 Wyoming Cowboys football team; 1995 Wyoming Cowboys football team; 1997 Wyoming Cowboys football team
The Wyoming Cowboy wrestling team competes in the Big 12 Conference, as the Mountain West does not sponsor the sport. From 2006 through 2015, the Cowboys competed in the Western Wrestling Conference, but that league disbanded at the end of the 2014–15 school year when all of its members accepted wrestling-only membership in the Big 12. Mark ...
English: Mountain West Conference logo in Wyoming Cowboys and Cowgirls colors. Date: 1 June 2017: Source: ... File talk:MW logo in Wyoming colors.svg; Metadata.
File:Wyoming Cowboy Hall of Fame logo.jpg This page was last edited on 5 April 2020, at 05:51 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Cheyenne held its first Frontier Days celebration in 1897. It started as a cowboy roundup that took place for one day. [47] Clayton Danks, the winner of three Cheyenne Frontier Days competitions prior to 1910, is the model cowboy on the horse Steamboat on the Wyoming trademark, the Bucking Horse and Rider. [48]
In the 1920s, an equipment manager named Deane Hunton found the picture. Thinking it embodied the spirit of the athletics program and the cowboy life, he stenciled an outline of the photograph, which became the iconic logo of the university (also found on Wyoming license plates since 1936 and many other places around the state). [4] [5]