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Wyoming Tourism and Sightseeing
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Where is Wyoming?
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Wyoming
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Things to do in Wyoming, Sightseeing and Wyoming Tourism Wyoming Tourism - Planning a Wyoming Vacation Below is a list of Wyoming tourist attractions, activities, events, hotels, restaurants and visitor information entries to help you plan a Wyoming Vacation! Find detailed information on the Wyoming tourism entries by clicking on their links. Narrow your search by selecting from a specific Wyoming travel category on the left hand menu.
Narrow Your Search You can find Wyoming tourist attractions and activities in all of Wyoming's regions: Cheyenne, Cody, Jackson Hole and Other.
Fun Things to do during your Wyoming Vacation - Top Wyoming Tourist Attractions and Activities Some of the most popular Wyoming tourist attractions that list on our site include Big Boy Steam Engine , Cheyenne Frontier Days Old West Museum & Store and Terry Bison Ranch.
Fun activities in Wyoming include Airport Golf Course, Prairie View Golf Course and Cheyenne Gunslingers.
Create an online Wyoming vacation itinerary You can use WeGoPlaces.com to plan your Wyoming vacation itinerary! To begin, select from our list of Wyoming tourist attractions, activities, accommodations, events, restaurants or Wyoming vacation & visitor information entries. Click the "Add" button to add individual entries to your online Wyoming vacation itinerary.
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Devils Tower National Monument National Park
Category: Devils Tower National Park in Wyoming
Description of this Wyoming Attraction: The nearly vertical monolith known as Devils Tower rises 1,267 feet above the meandering Belle Fourche River. Once hidden below the earth's surface, erosion has stripped away the softer rock layers revealing Devils Tower.
Known by several northern plains tribes as Bears Lodge, it is a sacred site of worship for many American Indians. The rolling hills of this 1,347 acre park are covered with pine forests, deciduous woodlands, and prairie grasslands. Deer, prairie dogs, and other wildlife are abundant.
Proclaimed September 24, 1906 as the nation's first national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt.
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Devils Tower National Monument
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Grand Encampment Museum Historical museum
Category: Encampment Museum in Wyoming
Description of this Wyoming Attraction: The Grand Encampment Museum interprets the ranching, mining, timbering and cultural history of the Sierra Madre Mountains and Upper North Platte and Encampment River Valleys. The collection includes several original buildings including a one-room school house, a homestead house, stage station, and business buildings from the community. As a National repository for the U.S. Forest Service, the museum also has an extensive Forest Service collection including an original fire lookout tower and guard station. Unique items include a two-story outhouse and three original towers from a 16-mile long aerial tramway (constructed in 1902-03) used to transport ore from copper mines to a smelter. We will hold a "Wrangler" youth program on June 19 from 9 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. which will include showing of historic cowboy clothing and gear and wrangler demonstrations, a free cowboy lunch and an obstacle course to try your newly learned wrangler skills. This is FREE for all young wranglers ages 5 and up. We hold Living History in connection with the Grand Encampment Cowboy Gathering annually. The 2009 events will be July 17-19. This year's events may include a book signing, and demonstrations by a blacksmith, a hatter, a spinner and textiles artist. The Mountain Man Rendezvous is the last weekend in July. Bring a picnic and a blanket and make it a day with your family!!! You'll have a GEM of a time!
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Grand Encampment Museum
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Grand Teton National Park National Park
Category: Moose National Park near Jackson Hole, Wyoming
Description of this Jackson Hole area Attraction: Located in northwestern Wyoming, Grand Teton National Park protects stunning mountain scenery and a diverse array of wildlife. The central feature of the park is the Teton Range an active, fault-block, 40-mile-long mountain front. The range includes eight peaks over 12,000 feet (3,658 m), including the Grand Teton at 13,770 feet (4,198 m). Seven morainal lakes run along the base of the range, and more than 100 alpine lakes can be found in the backcountry.
Elk, moose, pronghorn, mule deer, and bison are commonly seen in the park. Black bears are common in forested areas, while grizzlies are occasionally observed in the northern part of the park. More than 300 species of birds can be observed, including bald eagles and peregrine falcons.
We are pleased you have chosen to visit Grand Teton National Parks website. Click on the "In Depth" link to the right for additional information to help you plan your visit. We hope you enjoy your visit, both online and in person.
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Cheyenne Area Convention & Visitors Bureau Promoting the legendary history and attractions of Cheyenne
Category: Cheyenne Visitor Bureau in Wyoming
Description of this Cheyenne Visitor Information entry: Like many western towns, Cheyenne sprang up in the path of the transcontinental railroad in 1867 as it crossed the great plains. Nicknamed “Hell on Wheels," the rowdy town of railroad workers and soldiers from nearby Fort D.A. Russell was teeming with numerous saloons and burlesque theaters.
Cheyenne did not remain a wild town for long, as a booming livestock industry attracted investment from eastern and foreign cattle barons. With this new wealth, Cheyenne developed fine hotels, theaters, and the first opera house west of the Mississippi. In the 1880s, Cheyenne was the wealthiest per capita city in the world. The state Capitol’s dome was even covered in gold leaf.
Today, Cheyenne boasts many attractions that hearken back to its early days. Victorian mansions and historic buildings like the Capitol and Governors' Mansion dominate downtown. Cheyenne's newest downtown attraction is its restored Union Pacific Depot. The grand structure is home to a Visitors Center, restaurant, and the Cheyenne Depot Museum which highlights Cheyenne's railroad history.
Modern visitors can hear many of these classic stories on the Cheyenne Street Railway Trolley’s ninety minute historic tour (800-426-5009; May - Sept.). For a similar experience, horse-drawn carriage rides are available in the downtown area. Kids will enjoy the excitement of the West at the Terry Bison Ranch (307-634-4171) which boasts wagon and horseback rides, exotic animals, and 3,200 bison.
During the summer, the Cheyenne Gunslingers (800-426-5009) perform free western skits and gunfights at 6:00 p.m. each weeknight. Cheyenne’s Holliday Park is also home to one of the few surviving “Big Boys,” the largest steam locomotive ever made.
Cheyenne also has a Museum Loop Tour that includes the Cheyenne Frontier Days Old West Museum (307-778-7290), the Nelson Museum of the West (307-635-7670), the F.E. Warren ICBM and Heritage Museum (307-773-2980), Cheyenne Botanic Gardens (307-637-6458), and the Wyoming State Museum (307-777-7022).
Cheyenne is also known for its rodeo, Cheyenne Frontier Days(800-227-6336). Begun in 1897, the event has now grown into the largest outdoor rodeo and western celebration in the world. The celebration includes daily rodeos, nightly concerts, an Indian Village, parades, art shows, pancake breakfasts, a carnival, and more. The 113th Frontier Days takes place July 17 – July 26, 2009.
For a more relaxed rodeo experience, visitors can enjoy the Pine Bluff’s Outlaw Saloon Rodeo (307-632-3626) every Friday night June through August (40 miles east of Cheyenne).
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Cheyenne Area Convention & Visitors Bureau
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Meeteetse Visitor Center Meeteetse, WY
Category: Meeteetse Visitor Bureau near Cody, Wyoming
Description of this Cody area Visitor Information entry: Meeteetse, founded in 1890, remains a genuine western town, complete with wooden boardwalks and hitching posts, watering troughs and historic buildings. It sits along the banks of the Greybull River, which offers great fishing, hiking, picnicking or a spot to relax. Deer can be seen in town in the evenings, and outside of town all kinds of wildlife can be seen including deer, elk, pronghorn, moose, black bear, and rarely grizzly, mountain lions, foxes, wolves, bald eagles...
Things to see in Meeteetse:
Amelia Earhart monument
On the north edge of town sits a monument dedicated to the famous aviator. She was having a cabin built near Kirwin at the time she disappeared on her flight around the world.
Charles Belden Photograph Museum, Meeteetse Museum and Archives
A collection of photos and artifacts owned by famous Western Photographer Charles Belden can be found in Meeteetse. The Meeteetse Museum also has "Little Wahb" the grizzly bear who is one of the largest grizzly bears killed in the Yellowstone Ecosystem, in the lower 48 states. The museum also house several Harry Jackson sculptures and many rotating exhibits on Meeteetse history. The archives has a very large collection of histories and photographs of Meeteetse businesses, people, ranches, homesteaders and outlaws. Free. 1947 State Street, 307-868-2423. Open Mondays through Saturdays from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm in the summer; Tuesdays through Saturday from 10:00 am to 3:00 pm in the winter.
www.meeteetsemuseum.org
The Bank Museum
This former bank building now on the National Register of Historic Buildings. It house original bank artifacts, photographs, ledgers and other historic documents on businesses in Meeteetse and the surrounding area.
With it's original safe that was never robbed, boardwalks, and original brick exterior you take a walk back to 1901. Summer regular hours only: Open Fridays 9:30 am to 3:00 pm, Fridays, Tuesdays & Saturdays from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm. Special tours always welcome. 1033 Park Ave. 307-868-2423, www.meeteetsemuseum.org.
Outside of Meeteetse:
Shoshone National Forest
Trails, camping, and lots of wildlife...
Kirwin
Gold mining ghost town, remote with lots of wildlife. 4 wheel drive recommended. Access available May to November. Museum will sponsor its annual Kirwin tour on a Saturday in August.
They also have an Arland tour which will be held in September.
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Meeteetse Visitor Center
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