HAUNTED WYOMING
Well, hey there, folks, and welcome to The Roundup. We’re a Cowboy State Daily podcast that focuses on interesting people in the Cowboy State. Today, in observation of the upcoming spookiest of holidays, we’re steering away from the LIVING people in Wyoming… and focusing on those departed souls who are still making their presence known.
First, though, I want to take a minute to make sure you all are in the loop on another great podcast - the “Business From the Basement” podcast, supported by the Wyoming Business Alliance, is a fantastic resource for anyone who is a business person, who is interested in business, who could use some advice or new ideas. Check out the Wyoming Business Alliance’s “Business From the Basement” podcast!
Now… on to the stories.
Wendy Corr:
All right, folks, for the first stop on our tour of haunted Wyoming spots, we're going to the newest member of our Cowboy State daily team, Reilly Strand. Reilly's our videographer. He is my right hand. I'm so grateful to have him here.
And he went out with Mark Heinz, they went to the Laramie Plains Civic Center to explore some of the ghost stories. And so Reilly, so glad that you went to that - tell us, first off, what are the Haunted stories that you heard to get you there? Why did Mark say this is something we need to look up?
Reilly Strand:
Yeah. So when a lot of ghost stories are told, it seems a lot of people comment on those and say, well, you should go to the civic center in Laramie And it kept coming up. And there's a few stories that that have surfaced out of the civic center.
There's a girl on a tricycle, I think, that rides down the hallways at night, shadowy figures, voices, all sorts of stuff. There's a lot of history there. So a lot of potential for ghost stories, obviously.
Wendy Corr:
And so when you went to the civic center, what did you discover, and who did you go with?
Reilly Strand:
So outdoors reporter Mark Heinz and I joined Way Out West paranormal, which is a paranormal investigation group based in Cheyenne. They drove over that evening, as well as the manager, I think his position was, at the Civic Center. He's kind of the guy that looks after a lot of things. He does a lot of the maintenance on the building.
So Way Out West Paranormal, obviously, they believe in ghosts. The employee from the civic center does not believe in ghosts. So it's kind of a good push and shove of well, this is what we think is happening - Well, no, actually, that's not happening, because it's actually just radio interference or whatever.
So it was interesting to get both perspectives as we were walking around the building.
Wendy Corr:
What did you find? Did you feel anything? Did you see anything?
Reilly Strand:
Personally, there was definitely some spooky environments in there. I didn't feel any chills or anything like that. I didn't hear anything, but it's definitely eerie. I think you'd have to just, I guess, not be paying attention to not feel anything, because it is definitely a spooky place.
And there's an abandoned pool in the basement that was never used, that has no lights, we went down there. A fourth floor band room that looks straight out of a haunted house, we went up there. other sections of the basement, like the boiler room, where you just would have to be pretty unimaginative to not get a little spooked.
But even the skeptic, the employee at the Civic Center said, Yeah, I don't believe in ghosts, but like, it is pretty creepy in here. So even he had to admit that.
Wendy Corr:
That's great, Reilly, thank you for the story. And folks, you're going to be looking for those stories from Mark and from Reilly here on CowboyStateDaily.com.
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All right, folks, for the next segment of our haunted Wyoming podcast, we're going to Casper. We're going to Dale Killingbeck, who's our Casper reporter. And Dale has had the opportunity to talk to so many people about the historical, really interesting stories that have happened in that part of Wyoming.
And Dale, one of your most interesting haunted Wyoming stories took place at Fort Caspar. So give us a little bit of information about how they've discovered, and what they've discovered there at Fort Caspar when it comes to the paranormal.
Dale Killingbeck:
Sure. Yeah, they allow people to come in a couple times a year, you know, to kind of search the grounds, and they give them these paranormal ghost busting devices, and they allow them to go out on the grounds. But staff themselves have told me about things that have happened while they were there.
And so some of the strange things that they found is that, one staff member was telling me that she cleans the glass inside the museum, you know, of the different displays.
And so one day, she was about to clean the glass, and she sees the handprint of this little kid, but it's on the inside of the glass, you know, down in the middle of the glass, where there's no way that you can reach from the top and get a handprint down there. And they had never seen that handprint before, and all of a sudden, there's this handprint of a little kid, you know, that's on the glass in a display at the museum.
Wendy Corr:
Oh my gosh, I have such chills. Oh my gosh, that's creepy. Okay?
Dale Killingbeck:
And then, speaking of little kids, they told me another story about when they were actually doing an event, I think it was a ghost busting event, that there one of the museum staffers was sitting at a table, and she sees this little boy running by, and he's got plaid shirt on, suspenders and pants.
And she said it didn't really look like it was like from the 1800s but it looked unusual because it wasn't a t shirt, or, you know, the kind of things that kids typically wear today. And so the kid ran into another room, and so she got up and followed. And there was people in the room, but there was no evidence of the kid.
And she asked about it. Nobody else had seen the kid. And then later on, she talked to another staffer who had spotted that same child wearing the same thing outside by one of the Fort buildings. So again, there was, there was no real explanation for, you know, those occurrences. They had no easy explanation about why that happened.
And then I can tell another story, if you want me to.
Wendy Corr:
Yes, please, please. We want another story. What's your other story?
Dale Killingbeck:
So on a Monday, there's two staff members inside the museum. The museum is not open that day, and they were both working inside the museum, I think, in their office area.
And all of a sudden they hear a door open - and the museum doors were all locked. They hear the door open to the back museum that goes out to the Fort area. And they hear it close. And then they start hearing these hob nailed boots, which is what soldiers back in the day wore, you know, walking down the floor of the museum.
And so they both looked at each other, and I asked them if they were scared, and they said, No, you know, they just believe that, you know, it's one of the regulars around the museum.
Wendy Corr:
So that is so fantastic. Oh my gosh, to actually hear the boots of the soldiers at Fort Caspar, that's fantastic. Dale, thank you for sharing that ghost story for us.
Folks, go to Fort Caspar, talk to the staff there. They'll have the stories.
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Folks, for our next spooky ghost story, we're going to be going to Cowboy State Daily's Renee Jean. Renee has written extensively for the haunted Wyoming series, and she's got a couple of stories that she's going to tell us about today where she has been personally affected by a ghost. And I love these stories.
So Renee, my understanding is you're actually - even though you've written a couple of really great ghost stories for haunted Wyoming, you are actually a skeptic for these things. Tell us about this.
Renee Jean:
So I have a degree in chemistry and almost a second degree in life sciences. So, you know, I don't know if I really believe in ghosts at all, but I have to admit, I've had some experiences that I can't really explain scientifically, and one of them happened when I was just a kid.
So every summer, I go to visit my grandmother, and I spend a couple of weeks there. Usually my little sister would come with me. She's 10 years younger than I am, so I'm 15, she's about five. Well, this particular summer, she didn't come with me.
And when I get to Grandma's house, grandma has bought this child sized doll, and it is the creepiest thing I think I've ever seen. I mean, I was like, horror show, creeped out by this doll, but I didn't want to say anything, because my grandmother was just so excited about her doll and the things she was going to put on it, and she was going to keep it in my room. And like, oh, great, I'm going to have to sleep with the creepy doll.
Well, so I did. I spent the night with the creepy doll watching me all night long. Nothing happened. I thought, okay, I'm okay. Nothing happened. Well, I'm sitting at the snack bar and I'm eating my breakfast cereal. My grandma's over there cooking her breakfast. I think she was making some eggs. And I haven't, you know, I haven't had any coffee. I was too young to drink coffee at that time, I guess.
And I'm half asleep, and I could swear that my younger sister ran behind me, laughing and giggling and then ran back to the back room. So I'm not even thinking about it. I'm half asleep. I jump off the bar stool, I run to the back room, and there's nothing there but this creepy doll.
And the reason I ran back there is, I'm like, thinking, How could Leanne possibly be here? I know she didn't come with me, and she's not there. It's this creepy doll. I turn around to leave the room, and there is my grandmother right behind me, and I'm like, Grandma, what are you doing? She's like, well, I thought I heard Leanne laughing and giggling and running back to the back room. I'm like, Oh, okay. Well, that's what I thought I heard, too.
Grandma got rid of that doll.
We never had to sleep with that doll again. She's got rid of it right away. And I can't explain that. I mean, if it had just been me, I would be like, you know, okay, I was half asleep, apparently dreaming while I was awake or something. But apparently, she did it too at the same time and didn't know what I thought was happening. That I cannot explain.
Wendy Corr:
That is absolutely creepifiable. That is, that's crazy. Okay, that's a great story.
So let's talk about one other - you recently wrote a story. You were at the historic Sheridan Inn, and you were at the restaurant, you'd had a marvelous meal, and there's just a few people in the restaurant, and the waitress is cleaning up, and something unexplained happened. I want you to tell us what your experience was.
Renee Jean:
So I'm just sitting there, kind of scrolling through some news articles. I do that every day, you know, just kind of keeping up with what's going on in the world. What could I Wyoming-ize, did something major happen on a topic I'm following. And I'm not really paying any attention, Wendy, you know, I'm just enjoying myself.
But I hear something and I see something out of the corner of my eye, and this is another thing that I just can't explain. I see the waitress running over and kind of upset and picking up a glass off of the floor. And as I'm watching what's unfolding, there's a whole table erupts and starts talking about, you know, and I'm like, What the heck is going on here?
So I start listening a little closer. That table had watched that glass move by itself and kind of twirl off the table onto the floor, and I'm like, oh, oh, I guess I need to get my reporter's notebook out and start taking some notes here, because something just happened right almost in front of my eyeballs here.
Wendy Corr:
And the historic Sheridan has been purported to be haunted, right?
Renee Jean:
Yes, yes, it has. There are lots of stories about Miss Kate, you know, being the caretaker of the inn.
But there's also, the waitress told me about a clairvoyant trucker who came for dinner one night, and he told her that while he could see a lady standing in the doorway wearing like 1950s garb, she wouldn't come in the restaurant, but he did see like five guys at the end of the bar drinking whiskey.
They moved to a closer table at some point during their conversation to listen in. And he said, these ghosts are happy that people are in the restaurant now, because it used to be so quiet and there was no music, and with people there, there's energy. And they they feel like they're living vicariously again.
And so maybe the waitresses thought, its these little, these five whiskey drinking ghosts, or, you know, pranksters.
Wendy Corr:
That's fantastic. Renee, that's a great story. So anybody, if you're going to the historic Sheridan Inn in Sheridan, obviously, be on the lookout for five whiskey drinking ghosts and a proprietor lady, Miss Kate.
That's so fun. Oh my goodness, Renee, thank you for your stories, because you've got so many - you've written a lot of haunted Wyoming stories, and these are just a couple of the Haunted Wyoming stories, but these are great. Renee, thank you so much.
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Alright, folks, for our next set of ghost stories, we're going to go to Jackie Dorothy. Jackie is fairly recent to Cowboy State Daily. We are so glad we have her, because she is such an experienced historian, but a writer of historical stories, and so we're so glad to have her with us.
And in her writing and in her research over the years, she's uncovered a couple of really great ghost stories. So Jackie, start off telling us about the Badwater skeleton story.
Jackie Dorothy:
This is a story that's actually creeped me out for years. I had to really do some digging to even find the full story, to find the historical references and see how real it was. And I'm gonna let you guys decide if you think this is a real ghost story or if a figment of this family's imagination.
So in the 1940s, October, of course, this family was digging a cellar for their house. They wanted to be able to store their vegetables, their canned goods. And the wife of the house had been begging for this cellar, so they were out there. They figured it was going to be a three day project, and they're digging along the banks of the Badwater.
Now, the Badwater Creek is one that runs from Powder River all the way through Fremont County and empties into the Boysen reservoir. So you cross over Boysen and the Badwater Creek when you're going through to the Wind River Canyon, just to give you an idea of where it is.
So then this family is digging up, and they discover all of a sudden a shining, glittery thing is going through the air. And the dad shouts, stop. His name is Orin, by the way, so Orin Lichty shouts out, stop. He tries to stop the production, but it's too late. They had dumped the dirt out and buried a ruby ring.
So they have this treasure that they're on their hands and knees digging through the dirt. He's convinced that it was a huge, sparkling, beautiful ring. They never did find it. They finally give up.
Start digging again, and then Catherine, who's at the log home, hears another shout. She looks out there and they're staring at the ground. It's black and it's been burned. They don't know what they've just reached. She walks over and is about to ask them, Why did you guys stop? When she looks in and sees a skeleton. They found the human remains of somebody that had been shot five times with five different arrows, and this was in this pile that where they were digging the cellar.
So one of her son, he was a 15 year old, and Ray decided to take the bones, took the bones home with him and put him under his bed. What teenager is not going to do that, right?
So they continue digging the cellar. They get their cellar built. Ray, by the way, is sleeping by himself with these skeleton bones under his bed. And in the middle of the night, he's all alone, and he hears a fluttering, and he wakes up and sees a ghost. He's terrified. Turns out it's his mother's kitchen towels. So what is he going to do?
He decides that it's still too much, and in the middle of the night, he takes the box of bones. Crosses the Badwater Creek, goes into their barn and hides them in the rafters, and that's where these bones reside for years.
And in the meantime, they have the cellar. And the mom is going down. Her name's Catherine, and she's down there stocking the shelves. She hears a moaning sound, and she thinks it's a wounded animal. It's the wind. She goes out. There is no animal. There is no wind.
Goes back in, continues to stock and hears a crying woman, freaks her out. And of course, she's home alone, so she goes and gets the old neighbor. Now, this guy is very sensible. He is just like salt of the earth. Doesn't believe in all of this stuff.
She takes him down into the basement. They're standing there, and he hears it, and she's like, do you hear that? And he said, ‘I dang well do.’ And he took off running as fast as he could, never returned to that cellar.
And the whole time this family lived on the homestead, she reported that she continued to hear that crying in that moaning, but she wanted her cellar, so she just put up with it. And that's the story of the Badwater skeleton.
Wendy Corr:
Wow, that is a great story. Oh my gosh. I wonder if anybody lives on that property now?
Jackie Dorothy:
You know that's the question, because they did leave, and by the 1970s the cellar itself, there's pictures of it being caved in, and they then they moved into the Thermopolis pioneer home. It was brand new at the time, and they shared their story with the local reporter, and that's how we even have the story in the first place.
Wendy Corr:
That is fantastic. Oh my gosh, Jackie, thank you for that story. What you've got? You've got another story, though?
Jackie Dorothy:
Yes, now that was the very first one I wrote on a haunted Wyoming. And so the next one takes us to the Bighorn Mountains. There's a place up there. It's above Shell. A lot of people from Greybull, Sheridan, they all go up there and it's a great hunting area for elk. It's on Trappers Creek.
Well, in 1951 a young hunter was up there with a group of man, his dad and a bunch of other hunters from Greybull, and they got their elk, and he was sent back to camp, which was two miles away, to retrieve the pickup to pick up all of these elk that they had gutted and had ready to go.
So it was only two miles away, which was over two canyons and the creek. His dad's like, you know this area, you'll be fine. We're not worried. Go for it. Well, he got there and he got disoriented on the way to the camp.
A deep fog had descended. He didn't know where he was. He couldn't recall if he had gone over one or two canyons, and the terrain started getting really bad and steep, and he is just panicking at this point.
And he said, I know what I should have done. I should have stopped. I should have built a fire, but for whatever reason, I just kept going. And he is freaking out.
And suddenly the mist parts, and there is this boy standing there. He's wearing a red flannel shirt, and he looks down at him, and he points the opposite direction which this young teenager is headed. So the hunter stops, looks at this boy, shouts at him, doesn't hear a response, and the mist closes in again, and he loses sight.
But he listens to what this boy said, turns and starts walking the opposite direction he was going, and within a few minutes, he hits the road and he's able to get to camp. If it wasn't for that young boy, he would have gone the totally different direction, gotten lost. The weather was setting in. Who knows what would have happened to the 17 year old?
Now, nobody at his - when he did make it to the hunters, they didn't know what he was talking about.
So later, the next day, he went to another camp, talked to another hunter, and this Hunter told him I was lost in the fog too, and he describes this incident where the fog closed in. He did the same thing. He started panicking, and he was walking through the fog. Didn't know where he was, and suddenly the fog parted. This boy in a red flannel shirt looked at him and gestured for him to stop. Don't go any further. So the hunter stops, builds a fire, doesn't sleep at all that night, because that boy had disappeared.
And so that was two instances of this red flannel boy showing up and helping these hunters.
Wendy Corr:
And it turns out, right, that the red flannel boy himself had died back in, what, 1932? is that correct?
Jackie Dorothy:Yes. Now this gave me goosebumps, because I had found this story, and I knew about it, but I really, I just felt certain that there had to be something to tie into it. So I spent over an hour researching through old archives, looking for a story of someone that was lost in the Bighorns.
I got goosebumps because I was about to give up my search when I came across the story of Dillon McKinnon, this 17 year old boy who was lost in the Big Horns at Trapper Creek, same area, same circumstances.
A blizzard had blown in. All these hunters were stranded up there in 1932 including Dillon, and he was last spotted at this certain area, and there was search parties sent out for him, but they had to go back because this thick fog had rolled in and they could not find Dillon. They had hoped and prayed that he would be okay.
Unfortunately, Casper hunters stumbled upon his body a foot and a half under the snow, and he had died during this blizzard. So the question remains, did Dillon come back to help other hunters who had suffered the same fate, or was it an hallucination that was shared across the area?
Wendy Corr:
Jackie, those are great stories. Oh my gosh, and you tell them so well. Thank you. Thank you for telling us these great ghost stories from Fremont County and from the Big Horn mountains.
Folks, there are so many great haunted stories. Jackie, thanks for those.
Jackie Dorothy:
Thank you for having me.
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Okay, folks, the next stop on our haunted Wyoming tour is with our editor, our executive editor, Jimmy Orr. Jimmy has some fantastic stories that he's heard over the years, but he's personally experienced a couple of things too, which I think is fantastic,
Jimmy, you have a story about St Mark's Cathedral there in Cheyenne, and you have had, I mean, just really an interesting conversation with Rick Veit. Tell us. Introduce this segment here for us and this particular story. Jimmy, where did you hear about this story?
Jimmy Orr:
Alright, so it was, think it was 1979 and I was a I was, I think it was in seventh grade. And the popular TV show back then, Wendy, as you recall, was, ‘That's Incredible.’ And so the ‘That's Incredible’ crew came out to Cheyenne to investigate the St Mark's Episcopal Church, and they did a 15 minute segment on it.
And I was, I was blown away by it. It was, it was fascinating to me, and the whole story of how it became haunted.
Saint Mark's Church is the oldest church in Wyoming, in 1868 I think it was constructed. And so, based on this, the appearance on ‘That's Incredible,’ and all the kids were talking about it at school, right? And so my buddy Scott Hickman went to St Mark's, and I talked to him about it, and he said, Well, I bet I could get you a conversation with the rector, Eugene Todd.
And so I wanted to do a story on it. And so, and this couple years later, I was in ninth grade, and so I had an interview, one on one, with Rector Todd, and he was great, and and so I wrote a report on it.
But he took me into - the friend of mine and me - he took us into the bell tower, took us up to the bell tower and gave us the whole story of what happened.
Now, this is what makes it great. The story is of two Dutch stone masons who were building the bell tower in the 1800s, late 1800s - and the original church, by the way, is in Hanna, Wyoming, which is also fascinating in itself.
But they were building the bell tower, and one fell to his death. The other one didn't speak English, and so he was afraid that he would get strung up for it. And so what he did is he buried his buddy in the wall.
And so these walls are thick. I mean, they're three feet thick. And so he buried his buddy in the wall and and then just moved on, finished the bell tower. Blah, blah, blah.
He's on his deathbed in the 60s, and he felt like he needed to get it off his chest before he died.
So he contacted, he had somebody contact, Rector Todd, who I spoke to, and he went down to Denver in the nursing home where he was dying, and he confessed, I buried my buddy in the wall. And so Eugene Todd said, you know that's okay. Thanks for letting me know. And as soon as he told the rector the story, he died the next day.
And so Rector Todd told me what he had experienced - and you will see in this video, Rector Veit, who's now over in Laramie, tells what he's experienced, too.
But the interesting thing is, there was this, the very popular radio station in Denver, which you could hear in Cheyenne, was KIMN, and so there was this psychic, Lou. Can't remember Lou's last name, but she was very well known in the Denver area as a psychic.
And so she spent the night in the bell tower with two Denver Broncos, and she was broadcasting it live on KIMN, and they got so freaked out. And, you know, who knows? Maybe it was Hollywood blah, blah, blah, but they got so freaked out that they ran out of the bell tower, ran down the stairs and left. Two Denver Broncos and Lou Wright. Lou Wright was her name, and if you Google it, you'll see that story.
I mean, it's out there. But anyway, it's such a fascinating story, and it's so great and it's such a wonderful church. And Rick Veit is such a good guy where, you know, he's made friends with the ghosts.
So anyway, I did this video a couple years ago, maybe four years ago, with Rick. He took me up, and we walked through, and he rang the bell, and the whole thing, it's just fascinating. It's a wonderful story.
Wendy Corr:
Well, let's go to that video here right now, folks, you get a chance to watch it.
https://youtu.be/m9EN2V5gPcU?si=W9sGTJkQKf8Y_N14
Well, what a great story. Oh my gosh, Jimmy, thank you for sharing that video with us!
But that's just one of the stories that you have. You've got a couple more stories that we need to talk about today, and one of them involves the Wyoming governor's office. Tell us about that ghost story.
Jimmy Orr:
Yeah, actually, this is my favorite one. So I am the incoming press secretary for Governor Jim Geringer. So it's late 1994 and Danny Curran was the press secretary for Governor Mike Sullivan. And such a wonderful guy. He was the former journalist at UPI, and he was good friends with our late friend Jim Angell, just a great person.
And so Danny was showing me, you know, around the governor's office, how things were done, what he did, the whole thing through the great transition.
And so, before the Capitol was restored, and the governor's office was restored, in the second room after the entryway there, and the portraits are still there, but not in the same room, there was a wall that just had the photo of every governor in Wyoming. And they were all the same. They all were the photo, and the glass pane over it and everything.
And I noticed one of the photos didn't have a glass pane, so I asked Danny about it. I said, Why doesn't Alonzo Clark have a glass pane on it? He goes, ‘It's haunted.’
And, what? ‘What do you mean?’ He goes, ‘Listen, we have tried to put the glass back on the pane numerous times. Whenever we do it, it falls. So he doesn't like having a glass pane over him.’ I go, ‘Really?’ And he goes, ‘Yeah.’ And I said, ‘You're joking.’ And he goes, ‘No.’ He goes, ‘Try it. It won't last.’
And so I thought, well, this is awesome. And so I worked late at the governor's office, a lot of us did, but I'm there. And so what I did is, I bought a new frame for Alonzo Clark, put it over, and nothing happened.
So I'm just there late at night, blah, blah, blah. And one night I hear a crash. True story, Wendy. I hear a crash - and it would have been in 1996.
And so it was in the front office. And I walk up to the office, it's probably about 9:30 at night or whatever, and sure enough, Alonzo Clark's photo is on the ground and glass all over the place.
And I gotta tell you, I just had chills run up and down my back. And I'm looking at this and going, ‘Holy cow!’ (Not cow). And I'm just freaked. I am freaked.
Wendy Corr:
Oh my gosh, this is fantastic!
Jimmy Orr:
So I just left. I left the painting there, or the portrait there. I got my stuff and left and the next day, I told everybody, Danny was right. Alonzo does not want glass over his - and I swear this happened.
And so, and I told Danny about it, and he goes, ‘Yeah, I told you.’ So we put him back up. We never put glass over him again. And I don't know that I, you know, I haven't been back over there in a while. I don't know what's, you know, what's going on with them, but it absolutely happened.
Now, could the painting, you know, could that be weighted somehow? Whatever - I don't know. All I do know is it happened. 100% true.
Wendy Corr:
That is absolutely a fantastic, fantastic story. Oh my gosh. All right, well, we'll have to ask the governor if he's experienced that at some point.
Jimmy Orr:Yeah, if he's experiencing any strange vibes - those stories with the Capitol, and it can get kind of spooky and eerie at night, but I never felt, you know, it never felt haunted. It never felt anything. You know, it's just this, this guy didn't like, apparently, glass over its portrait. I don't know.
Wendy Corr:Apparently, yes! Jimmy, thank you for sharing your stories!
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And that’s all today for our haunted tour of Wyoming! If you’d like to read more spooky stories, just go to Cowboy State Daily dot com, and search for “Haunted Wyoming.” You’ll find ghost stories to keep you up at night - and who knows? You might have a haunted story of your own! If so, please reach out to us and share your stories so we might feature it in an upcoming article.
That’s it for The Roundup for this week! If you’ve missed any of our previous 45 episodes, just go to our website, our YouTube channel, or anywhere you get your podcasts, and search for Cowboy State Daily’s The Roundup, and spend some time with some of the most interesting people in Wyoming!
While you’re searching, don’t forget to check out the ‘Business From the Basement’ podcast, presented by the Wyoming Business Alliance. You’ll find great information, ideas and advice for your Wyoming business.
Thanks for tuning in, everyone - see you next week here on The Roundup!