News

The Discovery Channel’s popular show “Expedition Unknown” is digging into the mystery about what happened to the body of ...
Broken down by three workings including the Cody tunnel, Pure Gold working and Old Maudina Mine, mining operations from 1908 through 1944 yielded 17,700 short-ton units, or stu, of tungsten trioxide.
BUFFALO BILL CODY. Legend surrounding Buffalo Bill's gravesite survives a century after his death. ... Buffalo Bill Cody was a man of many roles, hats, beards and white horses.
From Beyoncé to “Yellowstone,” the cowboy is everywhere. But why does this myth keep riding back into the American imagination?
Pick up a cowboy hat in town to shade your face from the summer sun, ... Buffalo Bill Cody Historic Center, photo by mmmavocado. Wyoming State Museum. Grand Teton National Park.
This article was written by James Holloway, Special to The Post. Buffalo Bill’s Wild West, a three-hour extravaganza of Sioux ...
William “Buffalo Bill” Cody didn’t become famous for his mining ventures in the rugged country near Oracle north of Tucson. But mining ventures there were exactly what occupied him after his ...
The stone bases of two horse troughs built by William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody survive in the back yard at 1207 W. Fourth St. in North Platte, site of Cody’s second “Welcome Wigwam” home ...
But the spirit of William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody — known to Native Americans as Pahaska, or “Long Hair” — still shines most brightly on the western Plains and in the shadow of the Rockies.