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The Jim Gatchell Memorial Museum in Buffalo featured dioramas and exhibits about the Johnson County War, as well as a 7-foot (2.1 m) bronze statue of Nate Champion. [38] Kaycee, Wyoming, the old site of the KC Ranch, also erected the Hoofprints in the Past Museum to commemorate the war.
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Searching the databases at Wyoming Newspaper Project for people, places and events connected with the Johnson County War produces rich results. One of the most vivid is Champion’s account of the No...“Powder River Outrage: Champion Tells of the Attempt to Murder Him and Gilbertson.” Buffalo Bulletin, Dec. 17, 1891, 3.David, Robert. Malcolm Campbell, Sheriff. Casper, Wyo.: Wyomingana, 1932. Pages? An interesting, but one-sided presentation of the viewpoint of the big cattlemen.Davis, John W. Wyoming Range War.Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2010. A comprehensive overview of the invasion, the events leading to it and its repercussions, with close attention to how ma...Hufsmith, George. The Wyoming Lynching of Cattle Kate, 1889. Glendo, Wyo.: High Plains Press, 1993. Demonstrates convincingly how big cattlemen used newspapers they owned to spread disinformation a...Larson, T.A. History of Wyoming. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1965, 164-194, 268-284. A good overview of the boom and bust in cattle in the 1880s, and an excellent, if necessarily brief h...The photos of Nate Champion, the T.A. Ranch, the Go-Devil or Ark of Safety and the group photo of the invaders are from the collections of the Jim Gatchell Memorial Museumin Buffalo, used with thanks.
Sep 1, 2024 · The Johnson County War is one of the most brutal, vicious and pivotal chapters in Wyoming's history, when the state’s powerful cattle barons used terror and murder to drive off homesteaders. What they didn’t expect was how determined and tough those homesteaders would be.
- Andrew Rossi
Now viewed as the opening salvo in the War on Terrorism, the memorial honors the 273 Marines who lost their lives when a truck bomb destroyed the barracks in Beirut Lebanon and the subsequent actions.
The event came to be called the Johnson County War. Longtime Wyoming historian T.A. Larson ranked it “the most notorious event in the history of Wyoming.” Numerous court records contain valuable information on the invasion, as do other government documents, especially land files.
Jun 26, 2024 · Lejeune Memorial Gardens is a five-acre memorial in Jacksonville that honors many people who have bravely served our country and made the ultimate sacrifice. Whether you’re stationed at Camp Lejeune, a Jacksonville resident, or a visitor to the area, we’ve created this guide for you.
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The Johnson County War was a range war that occurred in the years 1889–1893. [3] The war was fought between the large ranchers (known as "cattle barons") and the homesteaders (known as "nesters" or "grangers"), both of whom competed for the limited land, water, and cattle in the Wyoming range.