Our second week here in Laramie begins with an afternoon tour of the Wyoming Territorial Prison State Historic Site. The Prison housed some pretty rough characters in its day, most notably "Butch Cassidy". Built in 1872 (fully restored in 1990) we found this tour interesting and informative. The outside is almost all original construction but because the prison was abandoned in 1903, the interior was gutted and the building's new purpose was agriculture research by the University of Wyoming.
This cell door here on the left is an original one from the Prison. Right, you see the reconstructed cell doors.
The Wyoming Territorial Prison also housed women prisoners. Their 2 cells displayed here were completely sequestered away from the men's cell blocks. Housing 4 women at once, it was very close quarters. The third cell block was their bathroom. When the Prison was first constructed, the first few women who were housed were placed on the north cell block with the men but held separately at the end of the cell block. In all a total of 12 women were ever held in the Wyoming Territorial Prison.
All of the furnishings displayed in the Prison are artifacts from that period. Original furnishings disappeared when the building was abandoned in 1903, then used for agricultural research purposes. That dentist chair, foot powered dental drill and dental tools gave us the creeps.
Prisoners were held to very strict rules, one which required them to change their undergarments every Sunday and failing to do so meant punishment. Convict labor was responsible for all washing and clothing repair.
The Wyoming Territorial Prison's most famous convict was Butch Cassidy. He was incarcerated on July 15, 1894 and spent about 18 months locked up here. He has his own information gallery with his robbery history throughout the West, his partners in crime and how he managed to allude the law even into South America and Bolivia.
We met a couple from California at The Ames Monument. That's Ronnie and the gentleman standing at the base of the Monument for size. |
I am not sure if these animals are deer or pronghorn. |
Vedauwoo also has it's own tree growing from a rock.
The prairie rose bushes were in bloom as well.
Vedauwoo has several huge rock clusters with their own distinct formations. This grouping has a boulder perched like a dice on its point.
And many of the boulders are huge!
These are the Sherman Mountains, what is left of them after millions of years of erosion by wind, water and ice. It is this weathering that has rounded the corners resulting in the blocky like rock forms.
In spite of what appears to be a dry, arid environment, this stream flows through the Vedauwoo Recreation Area.
Coming up on the 'Turtle Rock Trail', we were able to catch the ending segmant of a rock climber's experience for the day.
Using binoculars, we were able to see the climber on the rock's surface crack. You'll see him between the tree and boulder, just to the top, left of center on the crack near the top of the rock .
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