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Evanston is a city in and the county seat of Uinta County, Wyoming, United States. [7] The population was 11,747 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] It is located near the border with Utah .
Quinn and a partner bought out the local Sisson and Wallace operation in 1872 for $35,000 and went on to buy property around Evanston. The Quinns' new residence was built in 1880 for $10,000. In 1884 Quinn was elected to the Wyoming Territorial Legislature. Mattie led the local temperance movement and was a board member of the University of ...
The building was built for Charles Henry King in 1905–1906. King was a central Wyoming businessman who established a lumber business in the building. King is otherwise notable as the biological grandfather of U.S. president Gerald R. Ford. The First National Bank of Shoshoni was also located in the building. [2]
His father, James E. Cosgriff, was a native of Burlington, Vermont, who moved to Rawlins, Wyoming, in 1890 to raise 100,000 sheep. [4] He later started a bank in Rawlins, and acquired the Commercial National Bank of Salt Lake City in 1905. [4]
First Bank & Trust, headquartered in Evanston, Illinois and serving the Chicago area; First Bank System, a Minneapolis, Minnesota-based regional bank holding company that had used the trade name First Bank before the holding company was renamed U.S. Bancorp in 1997; First International Bank, in Watford City, North Dakota
The First State Bank of Baggs, also known as the Bank Club, is a building in Baggs, Wyoming, USA. Built in 1907–08 to house a bank, it is one of the relatively few original buildings left in Baggs. After the bank closed in 1924, the building became a doctor's office and, during Prohibition, it housed a bootleg liquor business. After ...
Wyoming State Insane Asylum: Wyoming State Insane Asylum: February 27, 2003 : 831 Wyoming Highway 150 S. Evanston: Wyoming's only state-run psychiatric hospital, an important statewide resource and a longstanding local institution. Contains 16 contributing properties built 1887–1948 that reflect trends in the treatment of mental illness.
The First National Bank of Rock River was built in 1919 in the small community of Rock River, Wyoming, at the peak of a local oil boom and operated from February 1920. The bank closed its doors on April 11, 1923 (The Wyoming State Journal (Lander), Volume 40, Number 16, April 20, 1923) as the oil boom collapsed and its vice president was convicted of embezzlement.