1835 The people of Cincinnati, Ohio raised funds for two cannons for Texas that
became known as the "twin sisters." Attribution: On This Day.
1880 Rain In The Face surrendered with 500 followers at Ft. Keogh.
1906 Eleven people were killed in a head on train collision near Azusa, Wyoming. The collision was caused by a mistake in a train order in a telegraph, and most of the men killed were railroad employees in a day coach.
1910 First annual conference of Wyoming clergy held. Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1918 Monuments that didn't happen. November 17, 1918.
1918 Monuments that didn't happen. November 17, 1918.
American infantrymen crossing the Armistice Line at Etain, November 17, 1918.
American troops were marching into Germany while some were denying that a prostrate Germany was prostrate. And at the same time a proposal was made to erect a monument to the Great War dead from Natrona County in front of the courthouse.
That courthouse is now gone. Maybe that monument was erected and is gone now, but as far as I'm aware, the only outdoor memorial to Natrona County's World War One veterans came up in the 2000s, although there were early memorials of other types, those being a trench mortar in Veteran's Park, Caissons at Washington Park, and a swimming pool named in memory of a lost soldier of World War One at the same park.
1919 November 17, 1919. News of the Carlyle Escape Breaks
News broke on this day in 1919 that William Carlisle, the train robber, had escaped from the penitentiary. He'd broken out on Saturday.
He would not be out for long.
1925 An earthquake occurred at Big Horn with the tremor felt in Johnson and Sheridan Counties. Attribution: On This Day.
News broke on this day in 1919 that William Carlisle, the train robber, had escaped from the penitentiary. He'd broken out on Saturday.
He would not be out for long.
1925 An earthquake occurred at Big Horn with the tremor felt in Johnson and Sheridan Counties. Attribution: On This Day.
1980 Christ Episcopal Church in Douglas added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Elsewhere:
1968 NBC outraged football fans by cutting away from the final minutes of a game to air a TV special, "Heidi," on schedule.
1970 Douglas Engelbart receives the patent for the first computer mouse.
2008 The vampire romance movie "Twilight" premiered in Los Angeles, an event destined in future years to be ranked with the Vandals sacking Rome as a really bad day for Western Civilization.
2012 From the Governor's office:
CHEYENNE, Wyo. -- Governor Matt Mead released the following statement regarding the refugee issue:"No state should have to endure the threat of terrorists entering our borders," Governor Mead said. "The President needs to make certain an absolutely thorough vetting system is in place that will not allow terrorists from Syria or any other part of the world into our country. In light of the horrific terrorist attacks in Paris, I have joined other governors in demanding the refugee process be halted until it is guaranteed to provide the security demanded by Wyoming and United States citizens. I have written the President (letter attached) to make it known Wyoming will not accept a lackluster system that allows terrorists to slip through the cracks."Governor Mead and other governors have a conference call with the President this afternoon.
I don't usually editorialize in these comments (although I do occasionally), but it's hard not to see this as a political reaction. Given the lack of infrastructure for it, it is doubtful at best that any Syrian refugees would have been resettled in Wyoming. A person can debate whether any terrorist might enter the US in this fashion, but a person is also bound to consider the added humanitarian crisis that failing to address this situation will cause, and the added likelihood of that potentially inspiring violence in the future.