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The Cheyenne Depot Museum is a railroad museum in Cheyenne, Wyoming, United States. It is located inside the 1880s Union Pacific Railroad depot. A National Historic Landmark , the station was the railroad's largest west of Council Bluffs, Iowa , and a major western example of Richardsonian Romanesque architecture.
Lame Deer (Meaveʼhoʼeno in Cheyenne [3]) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Rosebud County, Montana, United States. The community is named after Miniconjou Lakota chief Lame Deer, who was killed by the U.S. Army in 1877 under a flag of truce south of the town. [4] It was the site of a trading post from the late 1870s. [5]
The Cheyenne Flour Milling Company, also known as the Standard Oil Company and Salt Creek Freightways, is an early warehouse building in Cheyenne, Wyoming.The structure was built in 1927 to house goods brought to and from Cheyenne by the Union Pacific Railroad in an industrial section of Cheyenne as a flour mill, replacing structures that had performed similar functions since 1915.
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Pages in category "National Register of Historic Places in Cheyenne, Wyoming" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
English: Outlook Depot The structure was completed in 1913 along the Soo Line. A rangefire in 1999 destroyed the site. A rangefire in 1999 destroyed the site. This is a southern view of the site, which includes some remnants.
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A trackside view of the depot. The Great Northern Railway built the present Whitefish depot between September 10, 1927 and June 22, 1928. [9] [10] Architect Thomas D'Arcy McMahon designed the structure in a Tudor Revival style reminiscent of the Alpine resort hotels built by the railroad in nearby Glacier National Park and Waterton Lakes National Park during that same era, some of which were ...