How To Use This Site
How To Use This Site
This blog was updated on a daily basis for about two years, with those daily entries ceasing on December 31, 2013. The blog is still active, however, and we hope that people stopping in, who find something lacking, will add to the daily entries.
The blog still receives new posts as well, but now it receives them on items of Wyoming history. That has always been a feature of the blog, but Wyoming's history is rich and there are many items that are not fully covered here, if covered at all. Over time, we hope to remedy that.
You can obtain an entire month's listings by hitting on the appropriate month below, or an individual day by hitting on that calendar date. Use 2013 for the search date, as that's the day regular dates were established and fixed.
We hope you enjoy this site.
Friday, January 31, 2014
Wyoming History In The Making: Janaury 30, 2014. Attorney General to ask for Hill rehearing.
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Wyoming History in the Making: January 28, 2014 Wyoming S.Ct finds for Hill, 3-2
While Hill has, not without justification, declared this to be a victory, it isn't as complete as Hill may like to believe. the Casper Star Tribune has come out urging the Legislature to try again, stating:
Now, Hill can not and must not be off the legislative agenda for the
session. Legislators, it's time to get to work. It's time to craft a
bill that can keeps Cindy Hill away from the Education Department -- one
that will survive a Supreme Court review.
The Supreme Court'sThe Tribune further stated:
decision is not the victory Hill or her supporters pretend it is. By a
one-vote margin (and with a stinging dissent) the court left wide
latitude for the Legislature to write -- and narrow, even -- the job
description of the superintendent. It essentially said lawmakers went
too far with Senate File 104, the legislation that stripped Hill of most
of her powers, and said lawmakers broke the constitutional requirement
that demands the superintendent have "general supervision of the public
schools."
Cindy Hill has proven she's not not a good leader. She proven it time
and again in her short term as head of the department, as evidenced by
the number of employees who left rather than deal with Hill.
HerThe Constitutionality of the Legislature's statute always seemed questionable to me, which doesn't say anything about Hill one way or another. As for Hill, the Legislature recently undertook hearings on her conduct in which employees of the Department of Education testified against her, and the Legislature is considering impeaching her. Employees of the department are now justifiably concerned over what her return means. Hill is running for governor in an almost certainly doomed quixotic bid for that office. This reprieve, while perhaps brief, gives her the opportunity to show that she can effectively and rationally run this office, but it will require her to have much different personal leadership behavior than she had before.
return to the Department of Education is bad for the department, bad for
Wyoming education, and hence bad for Wyoming's children.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Lex Anteinternet: Keeping a Swimming Pool at NCHS
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Lex Anteinternet: Governor Hunt's World War Two Correspondence, Hear...
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Lex Anteinternet: Watching the Morph. How the news gets spun by the...
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Wyoming History in the Making: January 6, 2014, Liz Cheney drops out of U.S. Senate race.
Cheney, the daughter of former controversial Vice President Dick Cheney, mounted a controversial historic challenge of popular incumbent Mike Enzi. Seeking to find a ground to stand against Enzi, she tacked to the right of Cheney in a campaign which drew a lot of attention, but at the time of her withdrawal was clearly failing.
While an internal party challenge to a sitting incumbent member of Congress from Wyoming isn't unusual, one that is such a serious effort is. It is undoubtedly the most expensive such effort ever mounted in the state, and it started stunningly early. While Cheney failed to gain enough adherents by this stage to make her primary election likely, she did polarize the GOP in the state, which seems to be emerging from a long period of internal unity, and which also seems to be beginning to move away from the Tea Party elements within it, much like the national party is. This could be the beginning of an interesting political era within the state or at least within the state's GOP.
It also served to bring up distinct arguments about who is entitled to run in Wyoming, with Liz Cheney's campaign apparently badly underestimating the degree of state identity born by many Wyomingites. Voters appeared to not accept Cheney as a Wyomingite based upon her long absence from the state and appear to have also misinterpreted Wyoming's long re-election cycle for her father as a species of deep person admiration, rather than an admiration of effectiveness. Late in the campaign she was forced to introduce television advertisements which did nothing other than to point out her family's connection (through her mother, her father was born in Nebraska and spent his early years there) to the state and which were silent on her career as a Virginia lawyer married to a man who is still a Virginia lawyer.
All in all, this early primary effort will likely remain a fairly unique historical episode in the state's history, but potentially one with some long term impacts.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
New Feature: Wyoming History In The Making
This is a bit tough, we realize, as many, many stories turn out to be hugely historically significant without that being realized at the time. When the Chinese and Japanese fell into war in 1932, for example, who would have appreciated the extent that this would play into the global tragedy of World War II, or that it would lead to the fall of the Nationalist government in 1947, giving rise to Red China. It turned out to be enormously significant, but at the time it was probably most viewed as a big, but not earth shaking, tragedy.
Anyhow, we'll try to note some stories from time to time that we think will at least have some historical value. That is, they'd be the type of thing you would expect to find on this website in some future daily entry.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Navigation calendar now up.
We are indebted for this feature to This Day In U.S. Military History, which provided the html for this feature to us.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
December 31
1871 The Territorial Legislature authorized the formation of militia companies, the birth of the Wyoming National Guard.
1890 A New Year's Ball was held in the Casper Town Hall to benefit the Casper Cornet Band. Attribution. Wyoming State Historical Society.
1912 USS Wyoming made the President' flagship.
1916 The Cheyenne State Leader for December 31, 1916. Going out on a belligerent note.
And so 1916 would not go out on a peaceful note.
Carranza was unhappy that the protocol did not require a UW withdraw, the Allies were not tempted by peace. The Army was taking a position contrary to what supposedly the Administration was taking, if reports were accurate, in that it wanted to withdraw the expedition in Mexico.
A bizarre headline was featured on the front page indicating that "churchmen" were opposing "premature peace" in Europe, with the promise that details would be provided the following day.
It was a dry New Years Eve. . . at least officially for Americans and most Canadians who, if they were following the law, had to ring in the arrival of 1922 with some non-besotted beverage. I'm sure many did.
And there was a lot to celebrate that year. For Americans, the Great War had officially ended, although the fighting had obviously stopped quite some time prior. For the many Americans with Irish ancestry, it appeared that Irish independence was about to become a de jure, rather than a de facto, matter. Americans were moving definitively past World War One, and in a lot of ways definitively past a prior, much more rural, era and country.
Not all was well, however, as the economy was doing quite poorly. There was hope that would soon change, with that hope being expressed in a regional fashion on the cover of the Casper Daily Tribune.
Also, on the cover of the paper was the news that the County had taken over ownership of the hospital. It'd run the hospital until 2020, when Banner Health took over it, converting it back into a private hospital after almost a century of public ownership.
1941 Big Piney, Pinedale, Nowood, and Star Valley became the first Wyoming Conservation Districts when their Certifications of Organization were signed by Wyoming's Secretary of State Lester Hunt.
1950 Frank Barrett resigned from the US House of Representatives, where he had been Wyoming's Congressman, in order that he could take office as Governor.
1952 The 187th Fighter Bomber Squadron, Wyoming Air National Guard (F-51s) released from active service. During their service in Korea nine 187th pilots were lost.
1974 Private U.S. citizens were allowed to buy and own gold for the first time in more than 40 years.
1976 Wyoming hit by a statewide blizzard.
1978 Clifford Hanson, who was leaving his office as U.S. Senator, resigned, thereby allowing his successor, Alan K. Simpson to have Hanson's seniority by virtue of short appointment to replace him.
2011 The year departs with a Central Wyoming blizzard.
Monday, December 30, 2013
December 30
1835 Santa Ana declared that all foreigners taking up arms against Mexico would be treated as pirates and shot.
1916 The Cheyenne State Leader for December 30, 1916: Discussions breaking down.
In spite of an accord having been signed last week, this week it looked like the agreement with Mexico might be going nowhere.
1918 December 30, 1918. "Zero Weather" predicted for Cheyenne, Rosa Luxemburg urges a name change for the German Spartacus League in Germany, Goshen County Sheriff held on suspicion of murder.
Locally, while Germany was aflame, there was going to be "Zero Weather" in Cheyenne, which didn't mean what it sounded like. The Goshen County Sheriff was being held in connection with a killing and Congress was working on a bill for anticipated homesteading discharged soldiers.
1978 Teno Roncolio's technical last day as Wyoming's representative. He resigned a few days in advance of Dick Cheney being sworn in, but he had not run for reelection so the resignation was likely merely to slightly advance his last day in office prior to January 1.
Elsewhere:
1916 Grigori Rasputin Murdered.
Russian mystic and controversial friend of the Imperial household, Grigori Rasputin, murdered. This isn't, of course, a Wyoming story, but as it was part and parcel of what would become the Russian Revolution which lead ultimately to the long Cold War with the Soviet Union of which Wyoming was part, we've noted it here.
Rasputin was such a controversial figure during his lifetime, and lived in a land that remains so mysterious to outsiders today, that almost every aspect of his life is shrouded in myth or even outright error. To start with, contrary to what is widely assumed, he was not a monk nor did he hold any sort of office of any kind within the Russian Orthodox Church.
Rather, he was a wondering Russian Orthodox mystic, a position in Russian society that was recognized at the time. His exact religious beliefs are disputed and therefore the degree to which he held orthodox beliefs is not really clear.
He became a controversial figure due to his seeming influence on the Emperor and Empress, who remained true monarchs at the time, and therefore his influence was beyond what a person might otherwise presume. Much of this was due to his ability to calm or influence bleeding episodes on the part of the Crown Prince who was a hemophiliac. Ultimately concerns over his influence lead to his being assassinated although even the details regarding his death are murky.
He was 47 years old at the time of his death.
1919 Lincoln's Inn in London admits its first female bar student.
2009 The last roll of Kodachrome film is developed by Dwayne's Photo, the only remaining Kodachrome processor at the time.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
December 29
1879 Wyoming's Territorial Governor John Hoyt plans Wyoming's first official New Year's party by a governor at Interocean Hotel, Cheyenne, Wyoming.
1879 J. S. Nason takes office as Territorial Auditor.
1890. The Battle Wounded Knee occurs in South Dakota.
The battle followed a period of rising tensions on Western reservations during which various tribes began to become adherents of a spiritual movement which held that participation in a Ghost Dance would cause departed ancestors to return along with the buffalo, and the European Americans to depart. Ghost Dance movements created great nervousness amongst the American administration of the Reservations upon which they were occurring, including the Pine Ridge Reservation, where Wounded Knee took place. Tensions increased when Sitting Bull was killed in a gun fight with Indian Police on December 15 and troops were sent to the reservation thereafter after tensions increased amongst Sitting Bull's tribe, the Hunkpapa Sioux. When troops arrived, 200 Hunkpapa-Miniconjou Sioux fled the reservation towards the Cheyenne River. They were joined by a further 400 Sioux, who then reconsidered and turned themselves in at Ft. Bennett South Dakota.
The remaining 400 or so Sioux were set to surrender themselves at Wounded Knee but were delayed in doing so as their leader, Big Foot, was sick with pneumonia. When the Army arrived at Wounded Knee, it commenced to disarm the tribesmen on December 28, which was an unwelcome action on their part, and greatly increased tensions in the camp, which were made further tense by the upsetting of the camp by the soldiers, which included women and children. A militant medicine man further agitated the matter by reminding the tribesmen that their Ghost shirts were regarded as making them invulnerable to bullets. During this event, the rifle of Black Coyote, regarded by some of his tribesmen as crazy, went off accidentally while he was struggling to retain it. The medicine man gave the sign for retaliation and some Sioux leveled their rifles at the soldiers, and some may have fired them. In any event, the soldiers were soon firing at the Sioux, and Hotckiss cannons fired into the village. Of 230 Indian women and children and 120 men at the camp, 153 were known to be killed and 44 known to be wounded with many probable wounded likely escaping and relatives quickly removing many of the dead. Army casualties were 25 dead and 39 wounded Six Congressional Medals of Honor were issued for the action, which was a two day action by military calculations, which is typically a surprise to those not familiar with the battle. An inaccurate myth holds that the Army retracted the Medals of Honor in recent years, but this is not true. The battle aroused the ardor of the Brules and Oglalas on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud Reservations with some leaving those reservations as a result, but by January 16, 1891, the Army had rounded up the last of them who had come to acknowledge the hopelessness of the situation.
The tragic event is often noted as the closing battle of the Indian Wars, which it really is not. Various other actions would continue on throughout the 1890s, although they were always minor. At least one military pursuit occurred in the first decade of the 20th Century. Actions by Bronco Apaches, essentially renegades, would occur in northern Mexico, and spill over the border, as late as 1936. Perhaps it has this status, however as the presence of the 7th Cavalry at the action, and the location, make it a bit of a bookend to the Indian Wars in the popular imagination, contrasting with Little Big Horn, which is generally regarded as the largest Army defeat of the post Civil War, Indian Wars, period. Even that, of course, came well into the period of the Plains Indian Wars, so just as Wounded Knee was not the end of the actual conflict, Little Big Horn was not that near to the beginning.
Nonetheless, being such a singular defeat, it has come to stand for the end of the era for Native Americans, which probably is a generally correct view in some ways. After Wounded Knee, no Indian action would ever be regarded as seriously challenging US authority.
1916 The Casper Weekly Tribune for December 29, 1916: Carranza official arrives in Washington, land for St. Anthony's purchased, and the Ohio Oil Co. increases its capital.
The news about the Ohio Oil Company, at one time part of the Standard family but a stand alone entity after Standard was busted up in 1911, was not small news. Ohio Oil was a major player in the Natrona County oilfields at the time and would be for decades. It would contribute a major office building to Casper in later years which is still in use. At one time it was the largest oil company in the United States. In the 1960s it changed its name to Marathon and in the 1980s moved its headquarters from Casper to Cody Wyoming. At some point it began to have a major presence in the Houston area and in recent years it sold its Wyoming assets, including the Cody headquarters, and it now no longer has a presence of the same type in the state.
The Stock Raising Homestead Act of 1916 recognized the reality of Western homesteading which was that smaller parcels of property were not sufficient for Western agricultural conditions. It was not the only such homestead act, however, and other acts likewise provided larger parcels than the original act, whose anniversary is rapidly coming up. The act also recognized that homesteading not only remained popular, but the 1916 act came in the decade that would see the greatest number of homesteads filed nationally.
Perhaps most significant, in some ways, was that the 1916 act also recognized the split estate, which showed that the United States was interested in being the mineral interest owner henceforth, a change from prior policies. 1916 was also a boom year in oil and gas production, due to World War One, and the US was effectively keeping an interest in that production. The split estate remains a major feature of western mineral law today.
1921 Thursday December 29, 1921. The Raid hits the news.
We reported on this item yesterday. It hit the news across the state today, receiving front page treatment in both Casper and Cheyenne.
Cheyenne's paper also noted that Governor Short of Illinois was going to appear in front of a grand jury, but the way the headline was written must have caused Gov. Carey in Wyoming to gasp. Early example of "click bait"?
Mackenzie King became the Prime Minister of Canada. He'd serve in that role off and on, mostly on, until 1948. An intellectual with good writing but poor oral skills, he'd become a dominant Canadian political figure for a generation.
1941 All German, Italian and Japanese aliens in California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington and are ordered to surrender contraband. (WWII List).
1941 Sunge Yoshimoto, age nineteen, killed in the Lincoln-Star Coal Company tipple south of Kemmerer. He was a Japanese American war worker.
1943 Wartime quotas of new adult bicycles for January cut in half with 40 being allotted to Wyoming.Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1944 USS Lincoln County, a landing ship tank, commissioned.
2008 Third day of Yellowstone earthquake swarm.
2014 The Special Master issues his report on Tongue River allocations in Montana v. Wyoming. Wyoming newspapers report this as a victory for Wyoming, but Montana papers report that both states won some points in the decision, which now goes to the Supreme Court for approval or rejection.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
December 28
Interestingly, by the time Spain recognized Mexico, Texas was in rebellion against Mexico.
1865 Edward L. Baker Jr, a recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor for action in Cuba, born in Laramie County. Baker, an African American, rose to the rank of Captain, an extraordinarily rare occurrence for a black American at that time.
1883 Lloyd Fredendall born at Ft. D. A. Russell where his father was then serving. His father was not, however, a career soldier and would later become the Albany County Wyoming Sheriff. Fredendall was appointed to West Point by Senator F. E. Warren, twice, being dismissed from the school once for poor academic performance and dropping out once. None the less he was commissioned in to the Army after passing a qualifying exam while attending MIT. He served in World War One, but did not see combat as he was assigned to positions in the Army's service schools in France.
During World War Two his fortunes rose early as he was favored by Marshall and liked by Eisenhower, both of whom admired his cocky demeanor. He was assigned to major command positions in Operation Torch, but fell out of favor as he was not successful as an actual field commander. He was replaced by Eisenhower following the American defeat at Kasserine Pass and spent the rest of the war in a training command in the United States, where he did secure promotion to the grade of Lt. General. Historians have been hard on him, regarding his World War Two combat role proof that he was an inept commander.
1905 First issue of Worland Grit published. Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1913 Western Meat Market burned in Superior.
1916 The Wyoming Tribune for December 28, 1916: Villa commanding 10,000.
The Tribune carried disturbing news about a resurgent Villa and a reluctant Carranza.
1917 December 28, 1917. Home Economics.
1920 Kamekichi Masuda of Rock Springs received a patent for a basket.
1921 USS Laramie commissioned.
1928 Michael John Blyzka, major league baseball player, and resident of Cheyenne at the time of his death, born in Hamtramck, Michigan.
1944 Governor Lester Hunt proclaimed the day to be Seabee Day. The Seabees are the Navy's Construction Battalions, hence "CB", or Seabees. While all of the armed services have always had engineers, the Seabees were an early World War Two creation that proved critical in the construction of airfields and other facilities during the U.S. campaigns in the Pacific during the war. Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1993 A 4.7 magnitude earthquake occurs near Cody.
Friday, December 27, 2013
December 27
1867 Dakota Territorial Legislature creates Sweetwater County.
1890 The Union Pacific in Cheyenne received twelve new switch engines for distribution. Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.
1899 A shipment of 500 cats from New Jersey, being sent to the Philippines for "rat control," passes through Laramie, Wyoming, on the Union Pacific Railroad. That's a lot of cats.
1918 December 27, 1918. The Collapse of the German Empire. The Rise of Poland. A League of Nations.
1926 1,000 rabbits shot near Medicine Bow and sent to Rawlins, Wyoming, to feed the hungry.
1934 History repeated itself, according to the Casper Star Tribune:
Hundreds of Homes Enjoy Feast Provided by Great Hunt ...From the Trib's this "A Look Back In Time" column.
"The announcement that the thousands of rabbits taken by scores of nimrods in the most successful hunt of its kind ever staged in Wyoming were 'ready for the skillet' was all that was needed. ...
"Rabbits, skinned and washed to meet the taste of the most discriminating, disappeared as if by magic. The success of the hunt was only eclipsed by the appreciation of hundreds who came in a steady stream, and by 2 o'clock yesterday a supply which was expected to meet all demands was completely exhausted. ...
"No one tried to make off with more than a reasonable share. ...
The most taken by one family was 11 rabbits for a family of 10. Many asked only for two to four, depending upon the number in the household.
"The result was that rabbit sizzled and fried in hundreds of Casper homes last night."
1943 The USS Casper, a Tacoma Class frigate, launched.
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1941 American authorities in the Philippines declared Manila an open city.
1945 The World Bank was created with an agreement signed by 28 nations.
Elsewhere: 1900 Carry Nation carried out her first public smashing of a bar, at the Carey Hotel in Wichita, Kan.
1979 Soviet forces seized control of Afghanistan.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
New Format for Today In Wyoming's History
Now, after nearly two years, the blog is at the point were little new daily content is being added to it. Some has been, as I've found some new sources, but basically the blog is at a point where for it to really be expanded on a daily basis, I'd have to devote a lot more time to it than I have.
Given that, starting on January 1, 2014, it will not longer update daily. But the blog will remain. Hopefully I'll find a calendar feature that I can put up that will allow a person to link into any day in that fashion, but even without one, it is easy to obtain an entire month's listings through the links at the top of the page. So, for those who want to access any one day, it'll be easy to do so.
Beyond that, we will be adding articles on Wyoming's history from time to time, so the blog will continue to be updates with items which don't fit into any single day, but which have been major aspects of Wyoming's history. We hope you will continue to enjoy the blog.
We also hope that people who may feel a desire to comment on any one day will do so. This blog can be added to and improved by people who stop in, just as that has frequently been the case in the past.
December 26. Boxing Day
1917 The U.S. government took over operation of the nation's railroads during World War One.
This was a big deal.
The extent to which labor strife was a factor in the early US history of World War One is a story that tends to be drowned out by the opposite story during World War Two. With the lesson of the first war behind it, labor was highly cooperative during the Second World War and, for that matter, the war brought massive employment relief from the ongoing Great Depression.
The story wasn't at all same in regards to World War One. Going into the war the nation was faced with labor strife in the critical coal and railroad industries. On this day the Federal Government, giving a late unwelcome present to the railroads, nationalized rail and put the lines under the United States Railroad Administration. The USRA would continue to administer rail until March 1, 1920.
The action wasn't solely designed to address the threat of rail stoppages by any means. Rail was critical to the nation and formed the only means of interstate national transportation. This would largely remain the case in World War Two as well, of course, but by then there were beginning to be some changes to that. For that matter, its frankly the case far more today than people imagine. But in the teens, rail was absolutely predominant.
In spite of that, and in spite of their best efforts, the railroads simply found themselves unable to address the massively increased burden on the various national private companies, the accompanying inflation in rail prices, and addressing the needs of labor. The Interstate Commerce Commission did what it could, but it finally recommended nationalization in December, 1917. The President took action on the recommendation on this day.
The USRA's sweep was surprisingly broad, and it even included the standardization of locomotives and rail cars. Over 100,000 railroad cars and 1,930 locomotives were ordered for the war effort, which the USRA then leased.
1918 Boxing Day, 1918
In New York, the U.S. Navy, or rather some elements of it, were committed to a big victory parade.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
December 25. Christmas
1917 Mexican Raid on Brite's Ranch, Texas. December 25-26, 1917.