1743 • The Verendrye brothers are the first white men to visit Wyoming.
1803 • The United States concludes the Louisiana Purchase, which includes Wyoming.
1807-1808 • Fresh from the Lewis and Clark expedition, John Colter explores Wyoming. He
is the first European to lay eyes on the geyser basins of the Yellowstone ecosystem. In his written reports he calls the
area "Colter's Hell."
1811 • Wilson Price Hunt's Astorians head east from Fort Astoria, crossing through
Wyoming on a route that later becomes the Oregon Trail.
1811-1812 • Robert Stuart and returning Astorians crossed the Continental Divide in the
vicinity of South Pass and
built the first known cabin in Wyoming, on North Platte River near Bessemer Bend.
1822 • William Ashley puts an ad in a St. Louis paper to recruit able-bodied men for his
new enterprise. There is no
shortage of willing young men. Ashley will not build a chain
of forts to manage his fur trading operation. Instead,
he
sends his men out alone and makes arrangements to meet them all at a central place a year later. At
the
predetermined time, Ashley will load up his wagons
with supplies and head off to meet his men.
1824 • William H. Ashley's men rediscovered South Pass.
• The Rocky Mountain fur trappers and traders, including
Indians and mountain men, begin holding most of their
annual meetings along the Green River.
1825 • Beginning of fur trade rendezvous period. Ashley's yearly journey begins in St. Louis
and takes him deep into
the heart of the Rockies. His
wagons are the first vehicles to penetrate the west, blazing a wagon
road for the
settlers who will follow a decade later. When
Ashley finally reaches his men each year, it is cause for
celebration--a wild party they call "the rendezvous."
1832 • Capt. B. L. E. Bonneville took first wagons through South Pass, built Fort Bonneville
near present Daniel.
1833 • Bonneville discovers oil.
1834 • Wyoming's first permanent white settlement develops at Fort William near the confluence
of the Laramie and
North Platte rivers; it is eventually
renamed Fort Laramie.
1835 • Rendezvous missionary Dr. Marcus Whitman removes, to the amusement and amazement of
the assembled
multitudes, a 2-inch arrow or spearhead that had been lodged
in Jim Bridger's shoulder for the preceding 3
years.
1836 • Narcissa Whitmarr and Eliza Spalding, brides of missionaries, first White women to pass
over the Oregon Trail
to the Far West.
1842 • Capt. John C. Fremont's first expedition to Wyoming; named Fremont Peak.
• Gold is discovered in the South Pass district, but
the major gold rush will be delayed by the coming Civil War
and will start late in the 1860s. The great migration begins on the Oregon Trail.
1843 • Fort Bridger, second permanent settlement, established by Jim Bridger and Louis Vasquez.
1847 • Mormon migration to Utah. Mormon ferry established on North Platte River.
1849 • Gold seekers head to California over the California and Cherokee Trails.
• U.S. Government purchased Fort Laramie.
1852 • William Vaux, post chaplain, opened first school in Wyoming at Fort Laramie, assisted
by his daughter,
Victoria.
• Peak year for emigration on Oregon Trail.
1853 • Fort Supply, first agricultural settlement, established by Mormons near Fort Bridger.
Deserted and burned in
1857.
1860 • The Pony Express first delivers the mail by horseback courier.
1861 • Transcontinental telegraph completed.
• Pony Express discontinued.
1862 • Fort Halleck (1862 - 1866) established on Overland Trail.
• Overland stage line changed route from Oregon
Trail to Overland (Cherokee) Trail.
1863 • Bozeman Trail established.
• First newspaper in Wyoming, The Daily Telegraph,
established at Fort Bridger.
1865 • Train travel shifts south from the Oregon-California-Mormon corridor to the
Overland Trail in southern Wyoming.
1866 • Nelson Story drove first herd of cattle through Wyoming, going north to Montana.
• Indians massacre William J. Fetterman and eighty
troops near Fort Kearney, Wyoming.
1867 • The city of Cheyenne founded.
• Union Pacific Railroad entered Wyoming.
1868 • Wyoming Territory is established on July 25.
• Wind River Reservation for Shoshone Indians
created by treaty.
1869 • On December 10, Wyoming grants women the right to vote, hold office, and serve on juries.
1870 • Cowboys begin trailing cattle from Texas into and through Wyoming, beginning an industry
that remains strong
more than a century later.
• Esther Hobart Morris of South Pass City first woman
ever to be appointed Justice of the Peace (Feb. 17).
• Women first empaneled for jury service (March),
Laramie.
• First equal suffrage vote cast by Mrs. Louisa Swain
of Laramie (Sept. 6).
1871 • William "Buffalo Bill" Cody begins guiding hunting parties and even a Yale paleontologist through the
Yellowstone and Big Horn Basin area.
1872 • Congress designates Yellowstone as the first national park.
1873 • State prison is established in Laramie.
• The Wyoming Stock Growers Association is formed.
1876 • Cheyenne - Black Hills stage line launched.
1877 • Agreement made with Shoshone Indians to allow Arapahoes to move onto Wind River
Reservation.
• Chief Joseph leads his Nez Perce people through the
"Devil's Doorway" in the Yellowstone area during their
attempted escape to Canada.
1880 • Wealthy cattlemen form the Cactus Club in Cheyenne. It later becomes the Cheyenne
Club, a base where
anti-rustling activities are planned.
1883 • Electric lights introduced in Cheyenne.
1885 • Chinese Massacre at Rock Springs.
1886-1887 • A severe winter kills thousands of head of cattle. It becomes known as "The Great
Die-Up."
1888 • Capitol building completed.
1889 • Ellen Watson, a/k/a Cattle Kate hanged in Sweetwater Valley by members of the Stock
Growers Association.
1890 • Wyoming becomes a state on July 10.
1892 • A cattlemen's army invades Johnson County in an incident that becomes known as the
Johnson County
Invasion or Johnson County War.
1896 • After using a couple of other names for their town, Buffalo Bill's company picks Cody
in the hopes that his
reputation will bring in settlers. It
works.
1897 • Bighorn National Forest is established.
• First Cheyenne Frontier Days are celebrated,
beginning on September 23rd.
1900 • Chief Washakie buried with full military honors in post cemetery at Fort Washakie.
1901 • Cody charms the Burlington Railroad into building a 70-mile-long spur to his town.
• Wyoming Frontier Prison in Rawlins opens for prisoners.
1902 • J.C. Penney opens his first store in Kemmerer on April 13th.
1903 • Shoshone National Forest, the nations' first, is created in northwestern Wyoming.
• Tom Horn hanged in Cheyenne, November 20; buried in
Boulder, Colorado.
1904 • Brothers Howard, Alden, and Willis Eaton establish the West's first dude ranch near
Sheridan.
1906 • Devils Tower becomes the first national monument.