Jackie Dorothy
Jackie Dorothy is a reporter for Cowboy State Daily based in central Wyoming.
Over the past 20 years, Jackie has worked in television, radio and print across Wyoming. In this role, she has won numerous writing and history awards including the Wyoming Governor’s Journalist of the Year and SBA Journalist of the Year.
Jackie is also the podcast host of ‘Pioneers of Outlaw Country’ that explores little known historical stories of Wyoming with entertaining narrative.
Latest from Jackie Dorothy

Haunted Wyoming: Ghostly Guides Saved Explorer Lost In Yellowstone 155 Years Ago
In September 1870, Truman Everts was separated from the rest of his party in the heart of Yellowstone. In the following month, he survived a mountain lion attack, forest fire and near starvation. Full of despair, a ghostly figure appeared.
Jackie DorothyOctober 12, 2025

Wyoming Ballerina Needed Nerves Of Steel To Attend Boot Camp And Pursue Dreams
Thermopolis teen Skylar Lippincott overcame rejection and grueling challenges to earn a coveted spot at Ballet Chicago. “You have to work hard all the time and learn to ignore pain,” Lippincott said. “Ballet is a lifestyle.”
Jackie DorothyOctober 12, 2025

Wyoming History: Frank McGovern Squanders Fortune in Wyoming’s Sweetwater District
Educated Chicagoan Frank McGovern found the legendary Miners Delight mine, then lost over a million dollars to gambling, drinking, and violence, leaving behind a legacy of squandered wealth and scandal in South Pass City.
Jackie DorothyOctober 11, 2025

A Missing Heir And Mysterious Bell Haunted The Fountain Hotel In Yellowstone
A missing heir of a millionaire, disappearing motorists and a mysterious bell ringing for service in an empty room were some of the mysteries shrouding the Fountain Hotel in Yellowstone. Park rangers and guests were pleased when the luxury hotel was torn down in 1926, taking with it its ghosts.
Jackie DorothyOctober 11, 2025

Haunted Wyoming: The Mysterious Sandwich-Eating Ghost At Bridger Creek In The Big Horn Basin
In the remote Big Horn Basin, cowboys and locals tell of a spooky legend involving a woman’s ghost, eerie lights, and mysterious happenings at the infamous Rech Cabin, where history and the supernatural collide.
Jackie DorothyOctober 05, 2025

Wyoming History: Big Horn Loved A Pair Of Tame Elk, Until A Teacher Got Stomped
Back in the 1890s, a pair of tame elk delighted the townspeople of Big Horn, Wyoming. They even taught the elk how to pull wagons for them. Then one of them stomped the local schoolteacher and the love affair ended.
Jackie DorothyOctober 05, 2025

Haunted Wyoming: Locals Say Spirits Are Restless In Worland's Bootlegger Tunnels
When Worland business owners reported intruders in their locked basement, police found no one — but they also heard sounds in the bootlegger tunnels beneath the town. Locals swear spirits are still restless in the tunnels.
Jackie DorothyOctober 04, 2025

Artists From Around The World Compete For Coveted UCross Residency Program
Artists from around the world compete for coveted residency spots in tiny UCross, Wyoming. The town of 26 triples in size with the prestigious program, which has drawn American and international talent for 40 years.
Jackie DorothySeptember 28, 2025

Wyoming History: A Counterfeit Butch Cassidy Blew Himself Up In Laramie In 1900
Some modern history sleuths say Butch Cassidy died when he blew himself up with dynamite in 1900. Nope, says a prominent historian. That was Cassidy's cousin, Robert Parker Heap, not the infamous outlaw, whose real name was Robert Parker.
Jackie DorothySeptember 28, 2025

Three Weeks And 600 Miles: Robert Redford’s True Adventure On The Outlaw Trail
Robert Redford’s love of the West, Wyoming and their notorious outlaws was well-known. It led him in 1976 to retrace 600 miles of The Outlaw Trail on horseback, by car and by boat over three weeks for National Geographic magazine.
Jackie DorothySeptember 28, 2025

Meet The Master Wyoming Leatherworker And Artist Keeping His Western Craft Alive
James Jackson is a Wyoming leatherworker and artist who's famed for being a master of the Western "Sheridan Style." That's not by accident, as he learned it from Don King, a Wyoming-born leatherworking pioneer and legend.
Jackie DorothySeptember 27, 2025

Wyoming Coffee Klatch: Scotty Ratliff’s Kitchen Is Where World Problems Are Solved
Officially, Riverton is run by its elected city council. But the town's problems, and all the world's problems, are really solved by this group of old guys in Scotty Ratliff's coffee klatch.
Jackie DorothySeptember 27, 2025

She Wanted A Marker For Wyoming’s 1838 Rendezvous And Created An Outdoor Museum
When a Riverton woman noticed there wasn’t a historical marker memorializing Wyoming’s famous 1838 Rendezvous, she decided to do something about it. The result is an expansive outdoor museum open year-round.
Jackie DorothySeptember 21, 2025

Wyoming Silversmith Ernie Marsh Presented National Heritage Fellowship Award
Lovell's Ernie Marsh was presented the National Heritage Fellowship Award on Wednesday. The silversmith and bit and spur maker received the highest honor in the nation for folk and traditional arts. He’s one of only five artists from Wyoming to receive the award since its inception.
Jackie DorothySeptember 21, 2025

When He Saw There Wasn’t A Wyoming Cowboy Hall Of Fame, Scotty Ratliff Started One
Scotty Ratliff is known as the father of the Wyoming Cowboy Hall of Fame, which sprang from a startling revelation. He was shocked to learn the Cowboy State didn’t have a hall of fame for its legendary cowhands, so he started one.
Jackie DorothySeptember 20, 2025

Wyoming Remembers Robert Redford For His Love Of The Wild West
When Robert Redford was told he couldn’t buy the Hole-in-the-Wall bar in Thermopolis because it was installed in the Hot Springs County Museum, he bought another Wyoming bar. Then he had a replica of the Hole-in-the-Wall bar made for his home.
Jackie DorothySeptember 16, 2025

Wyoming History: That Time Old Jim Gregory Literally Talked A Man To Death
Fort Fred Steele in Carbon County was the setting for a legendary Old West Wyoming showdown. It was 1878 when Old Jim Gregory literally talked another man to death. When a doctor arrived, he looked at the body and said, “This is some of Gregory’s work."
Jackie DorothySeptember 14, 2025

Meet Mr. Fix-It: 87-Year-Old Martin Andreen Keeps Thermopolis Running
At 87, Martin Andreen is a Thermopolis throwback who's kept the small Wyoming town running for decades as a self-taught appliance repairman. He’s known to locals as Mr. Fix-It, and if he doesn’t know how to fix something, he’ll figure it out.
Jackie DorothySeptember 13, 2025

Mortimore Funeral Home Ends 80 Years of Ambulance Service In Rural Wyoming
After eight decades of ambulance service, Mortimore Funeral Home in Thermopolis is retiring its ambulance operations. In the 1950s, it was common practice to run an ambulance out of funeral homes because they had a big enough car to fit the cot, patient and attendant.
Jackie DorothySeptember 07, 2025

Wyoming History: Nobody Crossed ‘Chatty’ Chatfield, The Toughest Cowboy Pioneer
Against a backdrop of lawlessness and frontier legend, Elmer “Chatty” Chatfield may have been the toughest of them all. Even at birth he wasn’t fazed when a windstorm sent a tent pole onto his head.
Jackie DorothySeptember 07, 2025

After Saving Their Herds, Wyoming Ranchers Feed Hundreds Of Firefighters
As the 125,000-acre Red Canyon Fire threatened their herds and livelihoods, Wyoming ranchers scrambled to save them. Then they cooked up a storm to feed hundreds of firefighters also working to save them.
Jackie DorothySeptember 01, 2025