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  2. Heart Mountain Relocation Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Mountain_Relocation...

    The Heart Mountain War Relocation Center, named after nearby Heart Mountain and located midway between the northwest Wyoming towns of Cody and Powell, was one of ten concentration camps used for the internment of Japanese Americans evicted during World War II from their local communities (including their homes, businesses, and college residencies) in the West Coast Exclusion Zone by the ...

  3. Cheyenne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheyenne

    The alliance helped the Cheyenne expand their territory that stretched from southern Montana, through most of Wyoming, the eastern half of Colorado, far western Nebraska, and far western Kansas. By 1820, American traders and explorers reported contact with Cheyenne at present-day Denver, Colorado, and on the Arkansas River. The Cheyenne likely ...

  4. File:Heart Mountain Relocation Center, Heart Mountain ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Heart_Mountain...

    Scope and content: The full caption for this photograph reads: Heart Mountain Relocation Center, Heart Mountain, Wyoming. In his barracks home at Block 7 - 21, Bill Hosokawa and his wife Alice serves oyster stew in an evening's visit with the members of the War Relocation Authority appointed personnel.

  5. Gretel Ehrlich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gretel_Ehrlich

    Her first novel was also set in Wyoming, entitled Heart Mountain (1988), about a community being invaded by an internment camp for Japanese Americans. One of Ehrlich's best-received books is a volume of creative nonfiction essays called Islands, The Universe, Home.

  6. Wyoming Territory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyoming_Territory

    The Territory of Wyoming was an organized incorporated territory of the United States that existed from July 25, 1868, [1] until July 10, 1890, when it was admitted to the Union as the State of Wyoming. Cheyenne was the territorial capital. The boundaries of the Wyoming Territory were identical to those of the modern State of Wyoming.

  7. Heart Mountain (Wyoming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Mountain_(Wyoming)

    Heart Mountain is an 8,123-foot (2,476 m) klippe just north of Cody in the U.S. state of Wyoming, rising from the floor of the Bighorn Basin.The mountain is composed of limestone and dolomite of Ordovician through Mississippian age (about 500 to 350 million years old), but it rests on the Willwood Formation, rocks that are about 55 million years old—the rocks on the summit of Heart Mountain ...