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Cheyenne

 

Brian Beadles
Historic Preservation Specialist
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  • Fort D. A. Russell National Historic Landmark (F. E. Warren Air Force Base)

     
     

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    Fort David A. Russell, Fort Francis E. Warren and Francis E. Warren Air Force Base. The three separate phases of the history of this place are reflected in these three different names. Fort D. A. Russell was established in 1867 as a frontier infantry and cavalry post serving as a supply depot and to protect transcontinental railroad construction crews. The Fort, with its strategic location and railroad connection, was declared to be a permanent post by the War Department in 1885 and an extensive building program began. Fort Russell was enlarged to a brigade-sized post in 1906. In 1930 the post was renamed to Fort Francis E. Warren after a Cheyenne resident who served as United States Senator for 37 years. With the beginning of World War II, Fort Warren became a Quartermaster Training Center with twenty thousand men in training here. In 1947 Fort Warren was assigned to the Air Force and became Francis E. Warren Air Force Base. None of the original Fort D. A. Russell structures are extant, but most of the 1885 and later red brick barracks, officer's quarters, offices, and cavalry stables survive.

    Photos on file at the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office

    Fort-DA
     

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Wednesday, October 01, 1969
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA71  

     

  • Hebard Public School

     

     
     

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    Hebard Elementary School (formerly Hebard Public School), constructed in 1945, is eligible to the National Register of Historic Places Under Criterion A for its direct association with the growth of education in Cheyenne. Schools represented the widespread belief in the value of universal education. The formation of school districts and the building of schools reflected how Cheyenne’s citizens felt about the permanency of their community and their faith in its future. Hebard School reflects Cheyenne’s post-war city expansion on the South Side, a traditional working class neighborhood. This school is also used for public assemblies and civic celebrations, a place for the community to come together. The building is also eligible under Criterion C in the area of architecture as it represents a harbinger of school architecture in the 1950s and 1960s and represents the work of a master architect, Frederick Hutchinson Porter.

    hebard-school

     

    Date Added to Register:
    August 22, 2005
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number:
    LA2798

     

  • Keefe Row

     
     

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    The Keefe Cottages, nine residences built within the last decade of the 19th century, lie on the periphery of downtown Cheyenne. These row houses form a strong statement of brick in a neighborhood dominated by wood frame, and at first glance appear to be identical. However, upon further inspection, it can be discerned that there are four distinct variations on the original theme. The Keefe Cottages as a group are tied together by three strong common denominators--proximity, form, and material. The structures are placed in such a way that they dominate the immediate neighborhood. The form of each of the cottages is essentially rectangular. All are 1 1/2 stories with peaked gable roofs and frame porches. Exterior materials are predominately red brick and sandstone. The significance of these cottages relates to their architecture, architect, and contractor. The Keefe Cottages are architecturally unique to the city of Cheyenne. No where else in the city is there a row of houses so similar in nature and fabric that they may be visually grouped as a single unit. The architect of the structures was J. P. Julien, a resident of Cheyenne, who gained local notoriety through his work. M. P. Keefe, the contractor of Keefe Row and an associate of Julien, was widely acclaimed. He built the main portion of the state capitol building, most of the public schools of Cheyenne, several churches and banks, as well as half of Fort Russell.

    Keefe-Row
     

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Friday, August 03, 1979
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA429  

     

  • Kendrick Building (Charles Beatty House)

     

     
     

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    The Kendrick Building was designed by William Dubois as a residence for Charles L. Beatty in 1916. Presently occupied by the Wyoming Arts Council, a State agency, the Kendrick Building is located within the complex of State office buildings surrounding the Wyoming State Capitol Building. Built after the State Capitol Building, it typifies Cheyenne's small-town ambiance, in which family life, government and business activity continue to flourish next door to each other. The building is significant because it embodies a distinctive style as designed by one of Wyoming's most important architects. It is also important because it represents one period of Cheyenne's development as a community.

    Beatty

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Friday, July 06, 1990
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA1189  

     

  • Lakeview Historic District

     
     

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    The Lakeview Historic District is significant because it is a cohesive residential area representative of working class architecture found throughout historic Cheyenne. The earliest known structures in Lakeview date to about 1880. Development continued at a steadily increasing pace until about 1930. Construction then slowed, so that by the 1940s, only the occasional vacant lot was being developed. Lakeview is a neighborhood of modest homes originally occupied by railroad workers, clerks, and small business owners. As such, Lakeview is associated with the underlying growth of Cheyenne as a regional center and railroad town. Thus, the district complements its two neighbors, the Capitol North and Rainsford historic districts, both of which feature homes of wealthier ranchers, merchants, and politicians. Many of the same styles--Italianate, Queen Anne, American Foursquare, Bungalow, the revivals--are represented in Lakeview but as smaller, simpler examples.

     
    Lakeview
     
    Date Added to Register:
    Monday, August 05, 1996
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA1293  

     

  • Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association

     
     

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    Antiques Central is located at 2311 Reed Avenue in the northwest portion of the original plat of the City of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Cheyenne was basically created by the first transcontinental railroad, making it an important transportation center from its inception. Therefore, its commercial history was inextricably tied to the railroad. This building was constructed in 1922-1923 and was provided with a railroad siding that diverged north from the tracks that ran along Reed Avenue. This line was originally built to serve first Camp Carlin, an important nineteenth century military supply depot, then Fort D.A. Russell, and after 1887, points northward along what became the Cheyenne and Northern Railroad. The building represents early twentieth century factory/warehouse architecture and served first as the Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association creamery and warehouse, and then as a warehouse after the creamery closed in 1940.

     
    Laramie-County-Milk-Producers
     
    Date Added to Register:
    Monday, October 13, 2003
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA757  

     

  • Lulu McCormick Junior High School

     

     
     

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    Lulu McCormick Junior High School (Emerson Building) is eligible to the National Register of Historic Places Under Criteria A and C. It is eligible under Criterion A for its direct association with the growth of education in Cheyenne. The building reflects the primary importance the Cheyenne community attached to the education of its youth from its inception as a railroad town in 1867. Schools represented the widespread belief in the value of universal education. Education was one of the first critical issues dealt with by Cheyenne’s first citizens and by the first Wyoming territorial legislature. The formation of school districts and the building of schools reflected how Cheyenne’s citizens felt about the permanency of their community and their faith in its future. In addition to involving the community in the activities of the school (musical performances, dramatic and athletic events), Lulu McCormick Junior High was used as a gathering place for public assemblies and civic celebrations, a place for the community to come together. Lulu McCormick Junior High School was the first building constructed in Wyoming specifically as a junior high school. Therefore, it reflects the innovation of junior high schools in our national education, a movement that began in 1910. During its Fortieth Year Celebration in 1969-1970, United States Senator Gale McGee presented the school with an American flag that had been flown over the nation’s capitol.

    The building is also eligible under Criterion C in the area of architecture as an outstanding example of the Collegiate Gothic style in educational buildings and as the work of two master architects, William Dubois and Frederick Hutchinson Porter. It is the most elaborate of the three remaining educational structures in Cheyenne to represent this style (the others being Cheyenne High School and Johnson Junior High School, both of which were designed by Dubois).

    lulu-mccormick-school

     

    Date Added to Register:
    August 22, 2005
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number:
    LA857

     

  • Mabel Fincher School

     

     
     

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    Mabel Fincher School (currently Triumph High School) is eligible to the National Register of Historic Places Under Criteria A and C. It is eligible under Criterion A, because it reflects the primary importance the Cheyenne community attached to the education of its youth from its inception as a railroad town in 1867. Schools represented the widespread belief in the value of universal education. Education was one of the first critical issues dealt with by Cheyenne’s first citizens and by the first Wyoming territorial legislature. The formation of school districts and the building of schools reflected how Cheyenne’s citizens felt about the permanency of their community and their faith in its future. Mabel Fincher School, constructed in 1940, is a substantial brick masonry structure built with community pride and permanency in mind, and which incorporates the standard designs advocated by the early twentieth century educational reformers. This school was also used for public assemblies and civic celebrations, a place for the community to come together. It has continuously served as an educational facility for the children of Cheyenne to the present.

    The building is also eligible under Criterion C, because it is the only historic school in Cheyenne that fully represents the Art Deco style of architecture popular in America in the 1930s and 1940s. Two other schools, Corlett (1940) and Doming Elementary (1945), represent a combination of styles with limited Art Deco elements. Of special note is the use of bands of glazed brick in a wide range of colors and patterns in the facade, and the ornate terra cotta floral design used above the entrance. These economical decorative devices consisting of low relief geometrical designs and polychromatic materials represent classic Art Deco ornamentation and lend this school its unique and distinctive appearance.

    mabel-fincher-school

     

    Date Added to Register:
    August 22, 2005
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number:
    LA1020

     

  • Masonic Temple

     

     
     

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    The Cheyenne Masonic Temple, first built in 1901, is a well-preserved example of the type of building placed in the State Capitol's structural landscape at the turn of the century. The impressive three-floor brick structure with Romanesque features is representative of the efforts of Cheyenne builders to reflect an image of prosperity through the built environment. The building embodies the distinctive characteristics of a method of construction employed during the early twentieth century in Wyoming. Although certain changes in design occurred during the reconstruction period of the building in 1903 following a fire, sufficient numbers of architectural elements were retained so that significant original design and feeling components continued to be recognizable. Occupants of the building, the Cheyenne Masons, have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of Wyoming's social welfare history and thus the building serves as an architectural association with that contribution. In addition, through the memberships of numerous state and federal governmental leaders in the Lodge, the building is associated with persons who have made an impact on Wyoming's history.

     
    imageComingSoon

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Thursday, October 25, 1984
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA612  

     

  • McCord-Brady Company

     
     

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    Cheyenne Winlectric is located at 1506 Thomes Avenue in the western portion of the original commercial district of the City of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Cheyenne had its origins as a railroad town created in 1867 by the construction of the first transcontinental railroad, making it an important transportation center from its inception. Therefore, its commercial history was inextricably tied to the railroad. The building was constructed in ca. 1914-1915 and was provided with its own railroad siding on the south side, which has been removed. The Colorado and Southern Railroad laid tracks along the north side of the building; these have also been removed. However, the Union Pacific Railroad freight yards are located nearby, so the building retains its physical association with the railroad. The building is a well-preserved example of early twentieth century factory/warehouse architecture which originally functioned as a warehouse for a wholesale grocery concern, the McCord-Brady Company. In 1932 the McCord-Brady Company sold its holdings to the Asher-Wyoming Company which advertised itself as ''Wyoming's Leading Wholesale Grocer'' and remained at this location until 1974.

     
    McCord-Brady

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Monday, October 13, 2003
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA686  

     

  • McDonald Ranch

     
     

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    The McDonald Ranch is located southwest of Chugwater on Chugwater Creek. The ranch complex contains seven buildings, six of which are considered to be contributing elements of the complex. These buildings include a large L-shaped ranch house dating from 1890 constructed of native stone covered with stucco. Two large wood frame barns with gambrel roofs were built in 1927 and another wood frame barn with gable roof was probably constructed at an earlier date. Other outlying buildings include the original hewn log homestead cabin built about 1881, an early 20th century frame garage, a frame bunkhouse covered with stucco, and the remains of two rock-lined root cellars dug into a hill near the ranch house. The McDonald Ranch is an important representative of the pioneer southeastern Wyoming cattle industry, not only because of its influence on the economic development of the Chugwater area, but also because it retains architectural features and spatial orientation which reflect late 19th-early 20th century ranching.

    McDonald-Ranch
     

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Thursday, May 14, 1987
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA593  

     

  • Moore Haven Heights

     

     
     

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    The Moore Haven Heights Historic District is eligible as a distinct and cohesive residential area integrally associated with and representative of the significant trends that contributed to the development of the City of Cheyenne from the early twentieth century through the late 1950s. As conceived and carried out, Moore Haven Heights represented an upscale residential district constructed with well-built brick homes of a certain value with similar architectural styles to present a homogeneous appearance. Strict covenants assured that substantial brick homes were built and lots were restricted to single-family dwellings with a garage. As a result, Moore Haven Heights became an established upper-middle class neighborhood.

    The district is also nominated due to the remarkable physical integrity of the residences, which reflect the changes in popular architecture in America. From the Tudor brick in the 1920s and 1930s to the one-story Ranch homes built during the 1940s and 1950s. Thus, the predominant Tudor style homes of the 1920s and 1930s gave way to the new architecture, especially after World War II. Today, a drive through the neighborhood from south to north clearly reveals the difference in architecture, lot size, and landscaping.

     
    Moore-Haven-Heights

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Friday, April 11, 2008
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA1288  

     

  • Moreton Frewen House

     

     
     

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    The Moreton Frewen House was built in the early 1880s. The house is not especially significant for its architecture, exceptional material, or historic events. However, through its original owner and first tenant, Moreton Frewen, it stands as a symbol of a connection that once existed between two widely disparate historic movements. The first of these was a major era in the evolvement of modern Britain, and the second a phase of transition on the fast moving American frontier. Frewen was a wealth scion of British gentry. He was attracted by developments in the American west and eventually located a ranch near the present town of Kaycee, Wyoming. In the early 1880s he began to spend more and more time in Cheyenne in the promotion of various schemes to strengthen the cattle market. At this time he had constructed this small one story house and it remains one of the few surviving creations of Moreton Frewen.

     
    Frewen

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Monday, April 14, 1975
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA73  

     

  • Mt. Sinai Synagogue

     

     
     

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    The Mt. Sinai Synagogue in Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming is locally significant under criterion C for architecture. This building meets the requirements of criteria consideration A as a unique local example of mid-century Modernism. Mt. Sinai Synagogue represents the need for the relatively small and isolated Jewish community within the city of Cheyenne to maintain its strong religious ties to one another and maintain their deeply held beliefs and traditions, and for its reflection of the history of the Jewish population in Cheyenne since the founding of the city through modern times. It’s also a significant local example of the Mid-Century Modern style of architecture. The building retains integrity of location, design, materials, feeling and association with its simple, clean lines, large, undecorated walls, flat roof, and horizontal window banding. Construction of the synagogue began in 1949, was halted for roughly a year, and a cornerstone dedicated in 1950 when construction began again. The building is still used by the Mt. Sinai congregation for their Jewish faith and traditions.

     

     
    Mt-Sinai-Synagogue

    Date Added to Register:
    Tuesday, September 5, 2017
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA3429

     

  • Nagle-Warren Mansion

     
     

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    In 1886 Erasmus Nagle began construction of his home in Cheyenne. The Nagle Mansion is one of the best and last remaining examples of the opulence that was achieved by those who not only struck roots in Cheyenne in the 1870s and 1880s, but who were among the first to exploit the opportunities of the burgeoning economy on the frontier. Erasmus Nagle was one of the leading merchants of Cheyenne and the greater area of Wyoming territory, and is an example of the opportunistic businessman who worked during the heyday of the cattleman's frontier to achieve the power and prosperity that enabled him to build one of the town's finest mansions. Completed in the summer of 1888 at a cost of $50,000, the Nagle Mansion was an architectural showcase when opened to the public at a reception held on the evening of July 26, 1888. Built in the architectural style called Romanesque, the mansion is characterized by massive sandstone block walls and a steeply-gabled roof. Following Nagle's death, the property was purchased in 1915 by Francis E. Warren, a Wyoming territorial governor, the first state governor, and United States senator. Warren died in 1929 and his widow later sold the Warren Mansion to the Young Women's Christian Association.

    Nagle
     

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Monday, July 12, 1976
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA66  

     

  • Park Addition School

     

     
     

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    Park Addition School (vacant), constructed in 1921, is eligible to the National Register of Historic Places under Criteria A for its direct association with the growth of education in Cheyenne. The building represents the primary importance the Cheyenne community attached to the education of its youth from its inception as a railroad town in 1867. Universal education for all of its citizens was one of the first critical issues dealt with by the city’s founders and by the first Wyoming territorial legislature. The formation of school districts and the building of schools reflected how Cheyenne’s citizens felt about the permanency of their community and their faith in its future. The physical appearance of the Park Addition School, its conception, and its growth are closely intertwined with the economic growth of Cheyenne and the evolution of progressive ideas about education in America in the early twentieth century. As the key public building in the neighborhood. Park Addition School became the center for public assemblies and civic celebrations, a place for the community to come together. The building is also eligible under Criterion C in the area of architecture as a unique example of an eclectic mix of styles popular at the time and includes possible the Prairie School, Craftsman, and Sullivanesque influences. No other remaining public school building in Cheyenne is similar in style to the Park Addition School.

    park-addition-school

     

    Date Added to Register:
    August 22, 2005
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number:
    LA1290

     

  • Public Schools in Cheyenne from 1911-1954

     

     
     

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    Public education was a primary concern of Cheyenne's citizens from its beginnings in 1867-68 as a ''track town'' along the first transcontinental railroad, the Union Pacific. The Territory of Wyoming was created in 1868, and Cheyenne was designated the temporary capital. Previously, the first school was established for officers' children at Fort Laramie in 1852, and in 1860, Judge W. A. Carter built a school at Fort Bridger and hired a teacher for his own children and a few of the other children. However, neither of these facilities could be considered public schools. The first session of the Wyoming Legislative Assembly in 1869 organized the territorial school system in ''An Act providing for the organization of school districts, schools and for other purposes.'' The act was based on the Dakota Territory Statutes of 1862. The general organization was quite simple, consisting of a territorial superintendent of public instruction, a county superintendent for each county, and the establishment of school districts within each county. Here are the ten Cheyenne schools listed on the National Register:

    • Cheyenne High School (LCSD No. 1 Administration Building)
    • Lulu McCormick Junior High School (Emerson State Office Building)
    • Mabel Fincher School (Triumph High School)
    • Deming Elementary School
    • Corlett Elementary School
    • Park Addition School (Chaplin School)
    • Churchill Elementary School
    • Hebard Elementary School
    • Johnson Junior High School
    • Storey Gymnasium
     
    Cheyenne-Schools47

    Date Added to Register:
    August 22, 2005
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    LA3170  

     

  • Rainsford Historic District

     
     

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    Constructed between 1885 and the 1930s, the Rainsford neighborhood has its own unique history. Named for George Rainsford, an eastern architect who came west to try his hand at horse ranching in the 1870s and eventually designed homes for his contemporaries in Cheyenne, the neighborhood reflects his love for simplified traditional styles and varied roof shapes. Rainsford's designs were widely copied, borrowed from and expanded upon. A few of his houses still stand within the district, and a great many more reflect his influence. This area was once preferred by Cheyenne Cattle Barons, and represents the natural expansion of the city as it rapidly developed during the Cattle Boom. Rainsford District is an excellent expression of upper and upper middle class housing stock popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and its decline in bust years as larger lots were subdivided and sold for working class housing and multi-family apartment buildings. The homes, primarily of wood frame construction with some brick interspersed, range from single story bungalows and cottages to three story picturesque cottages. The Rainsford District is recognized for its association with locally and nationally significant individuals who laid the foundations for statehood; for its integrity as an historic neighborhood with uniform setbacks, plantings, slate sidewalks and unique character; and for its association with important factors such as the cash flow of the cattle era, the railroad tie to eastern markets, and the cultural and social aspirations of western businessmen which have made significant contributions to the broad patterns of Cheyenne and Wyoming history.

    Rainsford

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Tuesday, November 06, 1984
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA611  

     

  • St. Mark's Episcopal Church

     
     

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    According to tradition the inspiration for the design of St. Mark's came from the Stoke Poges Church near London. This ancient church, dating from 1080 A. D., was made famous as the site where Thomas Gray wrote ''Elegy in a Country Church Yard.'' The architectural style of St. Mark's is Old English with pointed arches, massive buttresses, plain finishing and a high-pitched shingle roof. The architect was Henry M. Congdon of New York City. Construction was begun in 1886. The stone work was done by Mr. William Toorey and the interior woodworking was done by Mr. George East. The red lava stone was quarried at Castle Rock, Colorado. Only the addition of the bell tower in 1925 has altered the profile of the 1886 construction. The interior of St. Mark's contains the original altar, wooden fixtures, pews and open beams placed in the building in 1888.

    Many memorable events have occurred in St. Mark's history through the years. In November of 1903 Cheyenne was alive with the Tom Horn affair. Accused of killing young Willie Nickell, Horn was tried by jury, found guilty and sentenced to be hung. St. Mark's assistant rector, the Rev. Mr. Watson, tried converting Tom Horn the night before his execution and the rector, the Rev. Mr. Rafter, prayed on the hanging platform right up until the time of Horn's death. A special service was held at St. Mark's for Tom Horn after his death. The funeral of the wife and three small daughters of General John J. Pershing took place at St. Mark's on August 31, 1915. Mrs. Pershing, daughter of Wyoming's United States Senator Francis E. Warren, along with three of her four children had met their death in a fire at the Presidio army post in California. October 11, 1936, was another noteworthy date at St. Mark's. That day President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor, entered the Church and quietly worshipped with the congregation. Roosevelt was in Cheyenne campaigning for his second term as President.

    St-Marks-Episcopal
     

     

    Date Added to Register:
    Thursday, February 26, 1970
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA68  

     

  • St. Mary's Catholic Cathedral

     
     

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    St. Mary's is a lofty, white sandstone English Gothic cathedral in the heart of Cheyenne. It was not until 1902, with the arrival of the third bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne, James J. Keane, that progress was made toward the erection of a cathedral in the city which in 1890 has become the state capitol. The creation of Cheyenne Diocese had not been anticipated in the early days of Cheyenne settlement, and since the congregation, which was now known as St. Mary's had outgrown its modest brick church at 19th and Carey, Bishop Keane set himself to the task of erecting a suitable cathedral and bishop's residence. The site chosen for the new cathedral was on Capitol Avenue. On July 7, 1907 amid a throng of 5000 people, the cornerstone of the cathedral building was laid. On January 31, 1909 in a ceremony attended by the most impressive gathering of Catholic ecclesiastics held in Wyoming St. Mary's Cathedral was dedicated.

     
    St-Marys-Catholic-Church
     
    Date Added to Register:
    Wednesday, November 20, 1974
     
    Location:
    Cheyenne
     
    County:
    Laramie County
     
    Smithsonian Number: 
    48LA67  

     

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