If you grew up in Wyoming you more than likely took a trip to Fort Laramie in either the fourth grade or fifth grade. But did you know about all of the ghostly happenings that go on there every few years or so?
More than 100,000 acres of farmland in southeastern Wyoming and the Nebraska panhandle is in jeopardy of going dry after an irrigation tunnel collapsed last week.
The canal, which supplies irrigation water to Goshen County, apparently collapsed early July 17 roughly a mile south of Fort Laramie...
This field trip, for most kids, was the first all day travel trip they ever got to go on for school. It may have not been the most exciting trip for many, but the memory still remains.
December 25, 1866, the soldiers at Fort Laramie gathered in the "Bedlam Building" for their annual Christmas party. By night's end, it would be the saddest holiday celebration in Wyoming history.
Unbeknownst to the merrymakers, just three days earlier, 81 of their former colleagues had been ambushed and killed at Fort Phil Kearney, near present-day Buffalo, Wyoming...
I love Monday night TV for nothing else but Antique Roadshow on PBS. There is nothing more exciting than seeing someone show up with an artifact that was given to them by their weird uncle Don and see their faces when the appraiser tells them it is worth $7000...