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Jackson Hole Airport 1250 E Airport Road, Jackson Hole
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Jackson Hole (JAC)
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CODY AIRPORT (COD) - 3001 DUGGLEBY DRIVE,
YELLOWSTONE REGIONAL AIRPORT CODY, WYOMING
JACKSON HOLE AIRPORT (JAC) - IN TERMINAL
JACKSON HOLE AIRPORT JACKSON HOLE, WYOMING |
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Gillette Airport - GCC
2000 Airport Road, Suite
143, Gillette, Wyoming
Natrona County International Airport - CPR 8500
Airport Parkway, Casper, Wyoming
Cheyenne Air Terminal - CYS
300 E 8th Avenue,
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Jackson Airport - JAC
8, Jackson, Wyoming
Rock Springs Airport - RKS
Rock Springs, Wyoming
Sheridan County Airport - SHR
913 W Brundage Lane,
Sheridan, Wyoming
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NATRONA COUNTY AIRPORT
8500 AIRPORT PARKWAY, CASPER [CPR]
225 N CACHE, JACKSON HOLE
[JC2]
Online reservations
JACKSON HOLE [JAC]
270 WEST PEARL STREET, JACKSON
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YELLOWSTONE REGIONAL AIRPORT [COD]
3227 DUGGLEBY DRIVE, CODY |
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INTERESTED IN VISITING CODY, WYOMING?
Colonel William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody first entered the Big Horn Basin of
Wyoming in the 1870's while Professor O.C. March, distinguished geologist of
Yale University, who was making a study of the natural resources of the
West. The tremendous possibilities for development of land through
irrigation, the rich soil, the grandeur of the scenery, the abundance of
fish and game, and the proximity of Yellowstone National Park, all were
influencing factors in the decision of Colonel Cody to return during the mid
1890's.
The Colonel and several friends came to the area with the avowed purpose of
land development and the building of a community. The original town site
selected was located at the east end of the Shoshone Canyon, but was later
moved to the present site of the city. At the insistence of Colonel Cody's
fellow developers, the site was named Cody in 1895. Streets were laid
out and named for General Phil Sheridan and the originators of the
community. By 1902, the town was incorporated and Colonel Cody opened his
famous "Hotel in the Rockies", the Irma, named after his youngest
daughter. In the same year, he induced the Burlington Railroad to build a
spur into the new town, and pioneered a road to the east entrance of
Yellowstone National Park. The famous TE Ranch, some thirty-five miles
southwest of Cody, was established as a horse and cattle ranch and hide-away
for brief periods of rest.
To bolster the economy of the struggling new town, Colonel Cody persuaded
his friend, President Teddy Roosevelt, to establish the Bureau of
Reclamation and to build the Shoshone Dam and Reservoir, later renamed the
Buffalo Bill Dam and Reservoir. With the completion of this dam, the highest
in the world at the time, the community was established soundly in the
irrigation and electric power fields. Also through his friendship with the
President, Buffalo Bill helped establish the first great National Forest,
the Shoshone, and the first Ranger Station, at Wapiti.The organization in
1901 of the Cody Club, Cody's Chamber of Commerce, the Cody Stampede and
Rodeo in 1922, the dedication of the various structures of the Buffalo Bill
Memorial Association, including the Gertrude Whitney Statue of Colonel Cody
in 1924, the Buffalo Bill Museum in 1927, and the Whitney Gallery of Western
Art in 1959, have all been steps in the development of the city.
Perhaps the greatest asset of Buffalo Bill's home town of Cody is the
continuation of the spirit of individual accomplishment, western
hospitality, honesty, and friendliness, and joint cooperation of the
citizens as was instilled in the early settlers by the "Old Scout". That
spirit still prevails and is manifested today on the streets and in the
homes of Cody Country people.
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