Smokehouse Saloon Greybull, WY The Smokehouse Saloon is an
Transcription
Smokehouse Saloon Greybull, WY The Smokehouse Saloon is an
Smokehouse Saloon Greybull, WY The Smokehouse Saloon is an old West-style saloon that features an 1800s cherrywood back bar. It was established in 1991. This Mahogany bar and back bar was originally in use at the Bison Bar in Sheridan, Wyoming. As this establishment closed in 1973, the bar was moved to the Old Mill Restaurant/Landmark Lounge in Newcastle Wyoming where it was in use until recently. The bar is currently disassembled and in storage in Sturgis, SD. The manufacturer is unknown. The mirrors are stamped “Denver Glass and Mirror Co., 1936”. The bar is unrestored but the overall condition is good. Some of the glass liquor shelves need to be replaced, as well as one section of the back mirror. Old neon tubing is still in place below the shelves and could be restored for a great lighting effect. The left section of the back bar is refrigerated and the working remote condensing unit is part of the package. The measurements are 20’9” wide by 8’7” deep, the back bar is 18” wide. Asking price is $ 12,900 or best offer. Cowboy Bar - Meteetse, WY (NW of Thermopolis) Big Jim" Blake, longtime owner of the Cowboy Bar in Meeteetse, Wyo., lost half his weight and racked up mammoth medical bills after a heart attack. To pay his debts, he may have to sell his beloved bar. The ornate wooden bar was shipped here in 1893 from the Chicago World's Fair. In its heyday, Meeteetse, named from combined Crow and Shoshone phrases, had seven saloons, 11 brothels, three newspapers and three banks — a stopover point for adventurers headed to the Montana gold fields. (2015) The Cowboy Bar has served them all — from the early gunslingers to the modern day most wanted. The establishment has been continuously operated since 1893. During prohibition they simply took down the sign for the saloon and started getting their whiskey shipments in milk barrels. Jim Blake sits at a table in the same room members of the Hole in the Wall gang used to drink and collude. He's telling stories that span nearly 120 years of desperados and questionable lawmen bellying up to his bar. The proprietor is also a local historian who has published over 20 books on the area's history. He has lots of stories to tell. He tells the story of a young Robert Leroy Parker who spent a lot of time in Meeteetse back in the late 1900s.The same year the Cowboy Saloon opened, Parker and a friend faced a grand larceny trial in Lander. The charges stemmed from a horse deal gone bad. According to Blake, Parker had purchased three horses that ended up being stolen. The charge was for the theft of a single horse. In 1894, the jury came back with a "not guilty" verdict, Parker headed to Meeteetse to celebrate his freedom with friends. After a lonely celebration (the friend he was supposed to meet had been arrested for butchering someone else's beef), Parker walked out of the Cowboy Bar and was arrested by Sheriff Charles Stough who had followed him to Meeteetse to arrest him for the same charges as before — but for the second of the three horses. Parker was found guilty and sentenced to two years of hard labor at the state penitentiary. When he got out, he traded in questionable horse deals for bank and train robberies. His given name was also soon replaced by the more well-known "Butch Cassidy." Blake tells the story of a young mountain man by the name of Earl Durand that found trouble at the Cowboy Bar back in the 1930s when he had the misfortune of running into Arthur Argento and his buddies. Argento's gang bullied the quiet loner and eventually dragged him outside and tossed him off the bridge into the freezing Greybull River. In 1939, Durand was arrested for poaching an elk out of season. After escaping from jail in Cody by knocking a jailer over the head with a milk bottle, the 26-year old fled to the home of his parents outside of Powell. He shot and killed two law enforcement agents that tracked him there.He soon made his escape to the Beartooth Mountains. During the standoff, Durand's marksmanship picked off two more of the approximately 100 men in the posse. One of the men he killed was, not-so coincidentally according to Blake, none other than that bar bully Arthur Argento. Today, Blake isn't done telling stories. He'll tell you about other Cowboy Bar customers throughout history. He has stories about Tom Horn, Kid Curry, Baron Otto Franc, Broncho Nell and Buffalo Bill Cody. Those ghosts of outlaws and lawmen now mingle with modern cowboys and the Longhorn basketball fans — their history memorialized by the trinkets, pictures and brands that adorn the walls of Meeteetse's Cowboy Bar. Irma Hotel - Cody Wyoming (1902) The cherry wood bar, was presented to Buffalo Bill by Queen Victoria as a gift A landmark in Cody, Wyoming, the Irma Hotel was built by famed William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody, the city's cofounder and namesake. Naming it for his daughter, Irma Cody, the hotel, which boasted that it was the most modern hotel in the Rockies, opened with a party on November 18, 1902 Buffalo Bill was under pressure from creditors and was forced to sign over the hotel to his wife Louisa in 1913, who was at that time on bad terms with him. After Cody's death in 1917 the hotel was foreclosed upon and sold to Barney Link. Before the end of the year Link's estate sold the property back to Louisa, who kept it until she died in 1925. The new owners, Henry and Pearl Newell, gradually expanded the hotel, building an annex around 1930 on the west side to accommodate automobile-borne visitors. After her husband's death in 1940, Pearl Newell operated the hotel until her own death in 1965 The hotel was designed by Alfred Wilderman Woods, a Lincoln, Nebraska church architect. Certain exterior walls are made of river rock and locally quarried sandstone from Beck Lake just south of town. The fireplace is an assemblage of rock, ores, minerals, and fossils from the Big Horn Basin. The original part of the hotel was built for Buffalo Bill in 1902. The northwest addition was constructed in 1929, and the southwest addition was added in 1976-1977. Million Dollar Cowboy Bar – Jackson WY The Cowboy Bar traces its history back to Joe Ruby's Cafe and Beer Garden established about 1934 by Joe Ruby (1885-1958). The bar was established on the on the original site of the Jackson State Bank founded by R. E. Miller. The bank opened in 1914 and in 1926 moved from N. Cache to a building adjacent to the Crabtree Hotel on E. Broadway. In 1936, the beer garden was sold to Ben Goe, Sr., a local rancher and reputed moonshiner. It was Ben Goe's good fortune that won the bar the first liquor license in the State of Wyoming following the repeal of prohibition. Goe renamed the establishment the "Cowboy Bar" and fixed it up a bit. The bar was remodeled to include the knobbled pine which graces the bar to this day. Mr. Goe spent one whole winter cleaning and scraping the pine before it was used for construction. Since the knobbled pine was so well liked by the customers, Ben spent another 14 months transporting more of the wood, for chairs, pillars, walls and ceiling trim. At this time they also built a long fancy bar with silver dollars inlaid in the top. In the mid-1940's, the Cowboy Bar was sold to Preston Parkinson, who is responsible for the present "Million Dollar Cowboy Bar" name. Mr. Parkinson expanded the bar, again using knobbled pine to create distinctive handles, railings and other interior and exterior decorations. In 1953, a gas explosion from the basement caused extensive damage to the bar. Many of the huge pine pillars crumbled, chairs were broken, and nearly all the elaborately decorated basement was destroyed. The owner vowed he would restore the bar to its original condition. He also added the huge neon sign that still marks the front of the bar on the town square. In 1973 to Ron Schultz, Bud Jensen, and Cliff Poindexter bought the bar and installed the saddle bar stools and a London-made red carpet that bore the symbol and name of the Cowboy Bar. Buckhorn Bar – Laramie WY The Buckhorn is downstairs. The Parlor is upstairs. The Buck, frequented by multiple generations of Cowboys from the University of Wyoming, is famous both in fact, fiction, and speculation. The saloon is "tastefully" decorated with dead animals on the walls including both frontal and in one instance, a rear end view. Hanging from the ceiling is a hangman's noose. The mirror over the backbar is famous for its bullet hole. The bullet hole was placed in the mirror by one Charlie Phillips in August 1971. Charlie had become smitten with Nelda, one of the bartenderesses. Nelda, however, rejected Charlie's attentions. Having had perhaps one too many, Charlie, possibly to get attention, whipped out his revolver and fired a shot into the ceiling. He then went out to the alley and fired off another shot. He then went around to Ivinson Avenue and plugged a neat shot right through the "C" in the Coors sign. Inside, the customers were all ducking for cover. The Coors shot went through the front window and hit the backbar mirror. The mirror had been replaced only a few weeks before. Mirrors are expensive. Thus, it was not replaced. Occidental Buffalo WY Hotel 1908 One visitor in the early days called the Occidental Saloon "a regular gambling hell," where high-stakes poker games sometimes continued for days. In 1908, the original rough barroom was replaced with one of the most elegant saloons in Wyoming. An imposing back bar with stained glass accents was installed, along with an intricately embossed tin ceiling, and impressive period decorations everywhere. All of this has been preserved and restored, for you to admire today as you enjoy a soda pop... or something stronger. When you mosey up to the 25-foot bar, you will be standing in the exact spot where cowboys, sheriffs, desperados and cattle barons gathered. You may almost hear them arguing and making deals. In your imagination, you might even hear shots ring out - and if you look around you and up at the ceiling, you can still count numerous original bullet holes! When you step through the front door of the Historic Occidental Hotel in Buffalo, Wyoming, you are truly stepping back into the Old West. In fact, everywhere you walk in this famous hotel, you will be walking where many famous people of the Old West walked – Butch Cassidy and the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang, Calamity Jane, Buffalo Bill, Tom Horn, the young Teddy Roosevelt... and many more. Located near the Bozeman Trail at the foot of the Bighorn Mountains and founded in 1880, the Occidental Hotel quickly became one of the most renowned hotels in Wyoming. In 1880, the hotel boasted six rooms upstairs in the main building, with a lobby, restaurant and saloon on the ground floor. The outbuildings contained a livery stable and a kitchen. Early in its existence, the Occidental established a reputation for hospitality and fine food. Owen Wister, author of The Virginian, spent many happy hours in the Occidental lobby and saloon, and based characters in his celebrated novel on cowboys and gunslingers that he observed there. Many historians believe that the shoot-out at the climax of the book — the first "walk down" in Western literature — took place in front of the Occidental. As time passed, the Occidental was expanded and rebuilt until it became a "grand" hotel, with elegant decor and fine service. Cowboys and ranchers from miles around, and many business travelers and tourists, went miles out of their way to enjoy the many pleasures offered by the Occidental. Among the famous people who visited the hotel at this stage were President Theodore Roosevelt, President Herbert Hoover and Ernest Hemingway. Then, during the Great Depression of the 1930s, the splendor of the hotel began to fade. As everybody in Wyoming tightened their belts, money became scarce. As business dried up, the owners of the Occidental began a long struggle to keep the doors open. During World War II, business picked up temporarily. But after the war, the slow decline of the hotel continued, as motels began to take business away from hotels. By the 1970s and 1980s, the Occidental was barely functioning as a hotel, and many of its rooms had been turned into apartments for retirees. In 1986, the hotel finally closed its doors. A few small businesses continued to occupy shops on the ground floor of the building, but very little money was available to keep up the structure. Year after year, the building became more and more dilapidated and unsafe. By 1997, the final demolition of the Occidental seemed close at hand. But the Occidental was not demolished. Instead, 1997 proved to be the year in which the grand old hotel was re-born. In that year, Dawn and John Wexo purchased the building and began a 10-year restoration process that has returned the Occidental Hotel to its status as one of the fine hotels of the West. As a result of this Award-Winning Restoration, you can visit an authentic Frontier hotel today that looks as it did almost 100 years ago. You can stay in elegant suites and rooms... eat at the finest restaurant in Northern Wyoming...and enjoy one of the most beautiful saloons in all of the West. The good old days at the Occidental Hotel are back! Miners and Stockmans Bar – Hartville WY The back bar was crafted in Germany in 1864 and travelled the final miles of its long journey to Hartville by wagon in 1881. Hartville, population 62 is the oldest incorporated town in Wyoming. While its days as a mining boom town in the late 19th century are long gone, there is still one local business that’s thriving. Miner’s and Stockmen’s Steakhouse and Spirits was established in 1862, proudly holding the title as Wyoming’s oldest bar. Longhorn Saloon Grill Sports Bar - Sundance WY The Brunswick dates to around 1890 and was locally refinished. Mint Bar - Sheridan WY Founded in 1907 as the Mint Saloon, the tavern became the Mint Cigar Company and Soda Shop in 1920. Then came Prohibition. The original wooden bar was removed, but the owners managed to covertly run a speakeasy in the back. The bar reopened following Prohibition’s repeal, much to the joy of the ranchers and townspeople of Sheridan, who could legally enjoy their "ditch," or whiskey mixed with water, once again. an addition was built on the back of the building to make room for slot machines, roulette wheels and gaming tables. The Mint was completely redecorated in the late 1940's in the rustic style seen today. The Mint saw a heyday in the 1950s and ‘60s, when cowboys and ranch hands would draw their wages once a month and come into town. As co-owner Monty Buckmaster tells it, some of them even had their mail delivered to the Mint. The bar’s interior décor includes a hodgepodge of taxidermy pieces, some originating from a trip to the Yukon made by previous owner L.L. “Mac” McVean in the 1950s; a black timber wolf, a wolverine, and two caribou all gaze down watchfully from their mounts. Hot Springs County Historical Museum Thermopolis WY In the museum, you discover the most famous, or infamous, piece in the collection – the historic cherry wood bar from the old Hole-in-the-Wall Saloon. Butch Cassidy and his gang frequented the Hole-in-the-Wall Saloon and sat at this very bar during their train robbing heyday! This world famous bar was owned by Tom Skinner. Mr. Skinner worked for a time at the Embar Ranch on Owl Creek in Wyoming. After watching the sheepherders and cowboys spend their money on whiskey, Mr. Skinner decided he could make more money as a bartender than a cowboy. He settled in Old Town Thermopolis, where he opened a saloon in a tent and kept his bed roll under the bar.When the new town of Thermopolis, Wyoming was founded in its present site in 1897, Mr. Skinner built an 18’ x 32’ cabin close to the corner of 5th and Arapahoe. Mr. Skinner had become a popular figure in town and his saloon was usually bustling. A sign on the front of the building read “free drinks served at all hours” but, anyone inquiring about it soon learned that the free drinks came from a well by the front door. Mr. Skinner’s business was so profitable that he had a new two story building constructed that covered 1½ lots. Beside his saloon the building housed a café, barbershop and a hotel. Mr. Skinner named his establishment the Hole-In-The-Wall Saloon after the hideout which was located east of town and used by the “Wild Bunch Outlaws” who were among his patrons and friends.The bar was handcrafted in Ireland and shipped to Thermopolis by steamship, train, and finally mule drawn wagon. The notorious bar was purchased by the Pioneer Association and now rests in our museum. The Sundance Owl Bar was moved to Sundance (Provo Utah) from Thermopolis, Wyoming. The restored 1890's bar is the original Rosewood Bar once frequented by Butch Cassidy's Hole-in-the-Wall Gang. For More pictures see Utah section Wolf Hotel - Saratoga WY At the corner of state Highway 130 and Bridge Street in Saratoga, Wyo. stands a worldfamous landmark long frequented by locals. The Hotel Wolf, a two-and-one-half story red brick building with gabled roof, was built in 1893 by German-born Frederick Wolf on the west side of the North Platte River. The purpose of the Hotel Wolf was to serve as a stage stop, although from the beginning the accommodations were considered quite elegant. Built with local bricks, the Victorianstyle Hotel Wolf opened to the public on Jan. 10, 1894. Passengers on the stages running south from Walcott Junction on the Union Pacific Railroad, or north from Encampment, Wyo., could rest and enjoy lunch in Saratoga after the morning’s ride. In 1900, the Wolfs’ son, Frederick M. Wolf, repainted and replaced wallpaper on the bottom floor. The Wolfs remodeled the hotel in 1902, the same year that electricity became available in Saratoga. A new south wing was built, and sleeping rooms were added. Frederick G. Wolf died in 1910. The following year, Christina Wolf leased the hotel to George “Baldy” Sisson, who purchased it in 1913 and renamed the structure the Hotel Sisson. In 1937, J. Earle Moore purchased the hotel. He died 10 years later, and his widow, Mary Moore, operated the business, known again as the Hotel Wolf, for another 30 years. The Campbells purchased the hotel with Michael Self in 1977; that partnership ended in 1983 and the Campbells remain sole owners. In the early 1970s, the hotel was named to the National Register of Historic Places. The Campbells re-bricked the west exterior wall, refinished the Georgia pine in the saloon and installed posts similar to those used in 1893 on the porch. Campbell decided to add a restaurant in 1978, and he moved the bar back to the original barroom and turned the vacated space into a dining room. Saratoga, the place “where the trout leap in Main Street,” - the actions of an impatient early day Encampment, Wyo., freighter, “Gee-String” Jack Fulkerson, tired of waiting for someone to help him unload supplies at a Saratoga saloon, probably contributed to the slogan. Fulkerson tossed lighted sticks of dynamite off the bridge and into the North Platte River. This blasted water all over and also fish all over Main Street. Mountain man Jim Baker and other trappers were the first whites to come to the area in 1838. The construction of the Union Pacific Railroad along an east-west route about 20 miles north of present-day Saratoga and the establishment of Fort Steele on the UP line brought more whites and settlers to the region. William Cadwell, a former hunter for the Overland Stage Company, built a cottonwood log structure and a bathhouse near the springs to accommodate soldiers from Fort Steele and others who came to enjoy the mineral waters. A post office, named Warm Springs, was established there Oct. 4, 1878. In 1883 Wilbur Hugus managed the Hugus and Chatterton store at Warm Springs. The next year, at Chatterton’s suggestion, the town was renamed Saratoga. By the summer of 1889, there were two general stores in Saratoga as well as a stable and livery, a blacksmith shop, two hotels and two saloons. The town thrived in the 1890s. Businesses included a photography studio, jewelry store, cigar factory, a dairy, two hotels and two saloons. In 1884, construction was completed on the Saratoga Springs Hotel, which had a large dining room that seated 60 people as well as a barbershop, drug store, billiard room and ladies’ reception room. A fire destroyed the building in 1902. , Scribner's famous six white horse team on the Encampment-to-Walcott stage, in front of the Hotel Wolf, Saratoga, around 1900. Charlie's Rustic Bar - Saratoga, Wyoming Historic bar that has served Saratoga since 1915. Sporting a hardwood dance floor with live music band stage and lots of wildlife mounts to look at. Recently for sale. World Famous Wonderbar – Casper WY Two frame buildings were joined in 1918 to make Middleton's Pool Hall. Except during Prohibition, liquor sales and billiards have been the main business at this site. In 1941, the building's bestknown occupant, the Wonder Bar, began business here. Casper's original Wonder Bar, on South center, for 50 years stirs up a host of memories from the Saloon Row on the south side of the 200 block on South Center, going back to the end of the Prohibition era in 1934.The only tavern on the street in 1933 was the Mint Bar at 256 S. Center, the present location of the Wonder Bar. Al Swanson, the proprietor in 1942, allowed cowboys to ride up to the bar and buy beer for both rider and mount. Then both would ride out the back door to the alley … hopefully leaving no calling cards. One of these riders was Joe Lowndes, once a member of the “Wild Bunch.” In the '40s and '50s, the New Wonder Bar was the life of the town. And it has outlasted four other taverns on South Center. The Wonder Bar has always been noted for attracting crowds and celebrities. Ernest Hemingway, Dizzy Dean, Ty Cobb, Rex Allen, and Ken Curtis. In 1954, baseball star Dizzy Dean stopped in while on a Wyoming hunting trip. Children gathered at the bar entrance, eager to catch a glimpse of their hero. Upon hearing about these young fans, Dean gave a waitress $20 and asked her to go and purchase as many baseballs as possible. In 1954, baseballs could be bought for only a few cents each. He autographed the balls, and handed them out to the adoring crowd. Jordans – Gillette WY JORDANS bar came out of the original “Log Cabin Saloon” in the historic district of Baker City, Oregon. Baker City is located about 125 miles northwest of Boise, Idaho along the old Oregon Trail between the Elkhorn and the Wallowa Mountains. It was known for its gold mining and lumber industries. History says that the town was part of our rugged frontier heritage and was known for its all-night saloons. It was crowded with gamblers, miners, ranchers, and cowboys. Mike Hoff (shown in white) was the original owner of the Log Cabin Saloon. The saloon was also known as “The Silver Dollar Log Cabin Saloon” and continued until 2010. A client whom I had done work for several years ago contacted me for this challenging project. He had acquired an 1896 Brunswick bar from the Log Cabin Saloon in Baker City, Oregon, one of the original settlements along the Oregon Trail. In a photograph showing the bar in the Log Cabin Saloon, the bar top was also inlayed with silver dollars but at some point in the history of the bar, those pieces were lost. By the time the bar came to me, a lot of the bar had been cut apart. Much of the original front bar was simply not in existence any more, and what was there was in poor condition, with much of the wood rotting away. My challenge was to deconstruct the bar and rebuild it, restoring it to its original glory and adding to it in order to extend the length and make it functional in a modern restaurant setting. Great care was taken to make sure that everything that was added fit the historical style. (Pin and Scroll Antique Designs - Colorado) Sheridan Inn – Sheridan WY The Sheridan Inn is a historic hotel in Sheridan, Wyoming. Designed by the architect Thomas R. Kimball of Omaha, Nebraska in 1893, it was constructed by the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad as part of its development program in Wyoming associated with extension of the railway. Equipped with the first bathtubs and electric lights in that part of Wyoming, the inn was considered the "finest hotel" between Chicago and San Francisco. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1964. Designed in the style of hotels which Kimball had seen in Scotland, the three-story, wood-frame inn is 145 feet long under a gambrel roof, with broad porches 30 feet wide on two sides. George and Lucy Canfield were the Inn’s first managers, catering to people who stayed at the Inn when their homes were being built, and the area ranchers who would spend their weekends at the Inn. In 1894 Buffalo Bill purchased the business, but not the building, and kept it until 1901, retaining the Canfield’s as managers. Across from the Inn, Bill Cody operated the W.F. Cody Transportation Company, the stage that ran from the Inn to Deadwood, South Dakota. The historic Sheridan Inn remains home to a ghostly spirit by the name of Miss Kate Arnold. In 1901, Catherine B. Arnold, familiarly known as "Miss Kate,” came to Sheridan from Virginia with her parents. At the age of 22 she started working and living at the Sheridan Inn and continued work there for the next 64 years as seamstress, desk clerk, housekeeper, hostess and babysitter. She stayed at the hotel until 1965 when it was closed and sold to a developer, who planned to tear it down and use the land for other purposes. However, the Sheridan Historical Society started a "Save the Inn” campaign that lasted for the next two years. After condemnation in 1967, the inn was purchased by Neltje Doubleday Kings, who undertook renovations and in 1968, "re-opened the Inn’s saloon, which was followed a year later by the re-opening of the dining room, the Ladies Parlor and the Wyoming Room, an all-new addition to the Inn. In 1968, Miss Kate passed away and her last request was to return to the Sheridan Inn. Her remains were cremated and her ashes buried in the wall of the room that she occupied on the third floor for so many years. Today, legend has it that Miss Kate continues to act as guardian over the Inn. In 1990, the Sheridan Heritage Center purchased the Inn from bankruptcy court and reopened it to the public in 1991. It closed in 2012 due to bills incurred while trying to renovate the inn. As of October 2013, the inn was purchased by Bob and Dana Townsend and Custom Services out of Tulsa Oklahoma. The first floor ballrooms have been reopened and a new restaurant named Open Range Bar & Grill opened in January 2015. B&W bar photo about 1933 Plains Hotel -Cheyenne, WY History of the 1911 opening: The Plains Hotel lobby is in the center of the grand floor and receives its day light through a mission art panel skylight. Brilliantly lighted at night by numerous lights shedding soft rays of light from heavy brass fixtures. The floor is tile and mahogany and genuine leather furniture graces the room. The stairway leading from the lobby is of marble and steel. A roomy alcove on Central Avenue side is the Cigar Stand, managed by Clara Frey. The bar of the lobby is regal in its gleaming plate glass and mahogany. Across from the bar is the famous Indian Grill Room and Cocktail lounge - a mecca for the unconventional. There's a Mezzanine Floor where the Plains Orchestra holds forth and comfy lounges and seats where guests may rest and enjoy themselves. Off the Mezzanine Floor is the Tea Room with its lovely drapes and dainty tables, awaiting mi-lady. Also off the Mezzanine is a huge Ladies Rest Room. The Plains opened in 1911 as Cheyenne, Wyoming’s premier full service hotel. Distinctive features such as the Range Room Banquet Facility, Wigwam Lounge and two-story lobby mezzanine with stained glass skylight, and finely appointed guest rooms, made The Plains Hotel unequaled in the Intermountain West. The front desk was solid marble guarded by an expensive bronze figure, stated to be an art masterpiece. The dining room was equipped with windows of art glass, a mahogany buffet and tables and chairs for 85 guests. Appearing on scene in the mid-1930’s was a furniture maker in Cody, Wyoming, names Thomas Molesworth. He used polished native woods with American rugs, and motifs were also used to create handsome chairs and couches. He designed bars incised with tomahawks and chandeliers of wrought iron with silhouettes suggesting Indian villages. The lampshades were stretched hide colored with Indian designs. In 1933, Mrs. Hynds redecorated the old hotel using a full complement of Molesworths finest creations. Today, pieces of Molesworth craftsmanship are highly sought after by collectors and that style set the theme for the 2002 renovation. Since the ‘face lift’ in 2002, The Plains Hotel has been brought back to its former glory. And along with that, the traditions of fine Western Hospitality still exist today. The elegance of the Old West awaits you at The Historic and Colorful Plains Hotel! A landmark historic hotel in Cheyenne that is more than a century old will be heading to auction later this month - The Historic Plains Hotel in downtown Cheyenne will sell at auction on Dec. 14 2015 The Bozeman Trail Inn - Big Horn Big Horn WY Although the nearby Bozeman Trail dates back to the mid 1860’s, the town wasn’t founded until 1881. A year later, in 1882, The Bozeman Trail Inn officially opened for business and is still going strong. Positioned dead center on the Bozeman Trail, the Bozeman Trail Inn is listed on the National Historic Registry The back bar, the focal point of the establishment, was bought from an Elk's Club in Omaha, Neb., shipped to Miles City, Mont., and picked up by three teams of freight wagons and brought to Big Horn. The railroad did not make it to this part of Wyoming until 1893. In the late 1890s, it became an Italian restaurant. In 1939, interior plumbing was installed when workers made do with that was available. Local ranchers used old car exhaust pipes for the sewer pipes. 2006 Local and state fire officials are investigating a fire that damaged the Bozeman Trail Inn, a 124-year-old tavern in Big Horn that is thought to be among the oldest operating bars in the state. The fire appeared to have started outside the back of the bar. The building had to be gutted. During reconstruction, however, the original doors, windows and hay doors were discovered. The floor timbers were hand-hewn with hand-held axes, held together with hand-made square nails. Initially built to be a stable, the original owner, John Custis, later turned the Bozeman into a billiards parlor and beer hall. It was called theLast Chance saloon (there is one in town currently). The Bozeman was built by local contractor J. W. Austan in 1882, an immigrant who brought his saw mill with him as he traveled to Wyoming. Austan built coffins on the side along with the Sheridan Commercial building in Sheridan. It was also during reconstruction that poor building design was discovered. The structure was built on the ground, on skids; the Bozeman had no foundation. The interior was finished to replicate the original building, with stucco walls and a reproduction tin ceiling. Completely rebuilt, the Bozeman now boasts a dining room with fine dining and a restored bar, complete with fireplace and pool table. The new name is Big Horn Smokehouse The historic Bozeman Trail of the mid-1860s passed through Big Horn. Scouted by John Bozeman through eastern Wyoming to the rich gold fields of Montana, the trail was the scene of many battles between those attempting to secure and use the trail and the Indians who relied upon the rich hunting grounds in the area. Those skirmishes earned the trail the nickname “The Bloody Bozeman”. The U.S. Cavalry forbade parties of fewer than 100 wagons to take the trail through Big Horn. College Inn Bar – Douglas WY The College Inn Bar is the oldest established business in Douglas, Wyoming and Converse County to survive in its original location. Established in 1906 by Theodore (Lee) Pringle, succeeding an 1887 bar known as "Lee Pringle's." The 1906 structure is a two-story masonry building, occupying the site of the frame Pringle's bar, which was moved two blocks away and which still survives. The bar, made by the BrunswickBalke Calendar Company of Chicago, features elaborate woodwork, with a mirrored marble and wood back bar. The mirrors were painted with western scenes in 1953. The barroom features taxidermy mounts and an arched vision screen with stained glass inserts, crowned by two stuffed golden eagles. Beyond the barroom is a lounge that used to feature ten curtained private booths, removed during Prohibition. The lounge retains call buttons and painted murals. B&W photos 1979 The College Inn Bar was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 10, 1979. McDermott Bar – Douglas WY built around 1906 Pioneer Museum - Douglas, WY It has an original bar from a local saloon in it.