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The Downtown Cody Historic District is the historic core of Cody, Wyoming, USA. "Historic" here refers to the early twentieth century, as Cody was not incorporated until 1901. Most of the commercial district was built between 1901 and the 1930s.
Cody is a city in and the county seat of Park County, Wyoming, United States. [5] It is named after Buffalo Bill Cody for his part in the founding of Cody in 1896. [6] The population was 10,028 at the 2020 census, making Cody the eleventh-largest city in Wyoming by population. Cody is served by Yellowstone Regional Airport. Buffalo Bill Cody, 1903
The Stock Center in Cody, Wyoming, United States, was built in 1927 as the original home of the Buffalo Bill Museum, serving in that purpose until the museum was relocated to a new complex across the street in 1969. The log structure is intended to suggest a stockman's log cabin, rendered on a large scale.
Sage Creek Road WYO 72: 15.45: 24.86 Carbon CR 402 in Elk Mountain: Adams Street in Hanna — — Hanna Road WYO 73: 4.64: 7.47 Sweetwater: US 287/WY 789 in Lamont — — Bairoil Road WYO 74: 0.13: 0.21 WYO 130 in Saratoga: Carbon CR 504 in Saratoga — — Unsigned; Bridge Street WYO 75: 22.10: 35.57 WYO 487 near Medicine Bow: WYO 487 near ...
Wyoming gained separate territorial status in 1868. Before that, most of the state's area was included in either Laramie County (part of the Dakota Territory) or as unorganized territory within the Dakota Territory. Wyoming Territory was established on July 25, 1868, at which time Laramie County was assigned to this jurisdiction. The area now ...
Geothermal area (now largely dormant) encountered by explorer and mountain man John Colter (c. 1770–c. 1812) in 1807; the first definitive place in Wyoming described by a Euro-American. [12] 10: Dead Indian Campsite: May 3, 1974 : Sunlight Basin Road [13] Cody vicinity
Wyoming Highway 291 (WYO 291) is a 9.46-mile-long (15.22 km) north-south Wyoming state road located in central Park County and provides access to Buffalo Bill State Park, Buffalo Bill Dam, and Buffalo Bill Reservoir as well as other areas southwest of Cody.
The Chamberlin Inn is a historic Cody, Wyoming hotel and landmark, known famously as the hotel where Ernest Hemingway stayed and finished his manuscript, Death in the Afternoon. Located at 1032 12th Street in downtown Cody, Wyoming the small boutique hotel is 21 units made up of a series of suites, rooms, cottage and garden studios, as well as ...