Jackson, Wyoming is located just south of Yellowstone National Park, in a valley called Jackson Hole.
Jackson is a small town, with a population of about 8700, but is a major gateway for the millions of tourists visiting nearby Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park.
There is a small Old West-style city on the north side of Yellowstone National Park that is known for its atmosphere and architecture. Although many think the small town of Gardiner is still in Wyoming, it is located in Montana. Cody, Wyoming is a famous Western town on the east side of the park, and the ghost town/tourist attractions of Virginia City and Nevada City, Montana are located near the park as well. There is not a similar town located south of Yellowstone.
Jackson, Wyoming is located just south of Yellowstone National Park, in a valley called Jackson Hole.
Jackson is a small town, with a population of about 8700, but is a major gateway for the millions of tourists visiting nearby Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park.
There are several little towns in western Wyoming such as:
Alpine
Afton
Auburn
Big Sandy
Boulder
Cody
Daniel
Dubois
Eden
Etna
Evanston
Fort Washakie
Green River
Jackson
Kemerer
LaBarge
Lander
Little America
Mammoth
Meeteetse
Moose
Moran
Pinedale
Rock Springs
Wapiti
and many more!
Jackson, Wyoming is located just south of Yellowstone National Park, in a valley called Jackson Hole.
Jackson is a small town, with a population of about 8700, but is a major gateway for the millions of tourists visiting nearby Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park.
Jackson is the name of the small city in Wyoming just south of Yellowstone National Park. It is in the Teton Mountains and is a destination in itself.
Jackson, Wyoming
price for OldWest Collectors Series post card Gall Sioux War chief
price for OldWest Collectors Series post card Gall Sioux War chief
Wild Bill Hitchcock is a famous Wild West Gunslinger. His death is known for the aces and eights 'dead man's hand' in poker which he had when he was killed in Deadwood South Dakota. http://www.abacom.com/~jkrause/hickok.html http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/WWhickok.htm http://www.deadwood.org/AboutDeadwood/History/?utm_source=GooglePPC&utm_medium=PPC&utm_content=OldWest&utm_campaign=BHDS2008
There is a Sackett family, on the Isle of Eli in England, but L'Amour admitted already that this family actually had nothing to do with the Sacketts of his books. Early on in his writing career, Louis L'Amour decided that he wanted to trace the westward expansion across America through three families--the Talons, the Chantry's, and the Sacketts. While other books do relate the exploits of various Chantry's and Talons, his eighteen Sackett novels have become a staple of Louis L'Amour's work. In "Sackett's Land", Louis L'Amour begins his saga (chronologically--the first book he ~wrote~ was "The Daybreakers") with Barnabas Sackett, the first of his line to come to America. Other books followed the lives of his sons, then other members of the family line. The majority of them center on the family in the heyday of the OldWest, the two decades after the War Between the States, and especially upon the character William Tell Sackett, a constant favorite of readers. A trademark of the Sackett family is the clannishness. It's often mentioned that no Sackett is truly alone, and in "Ride the River" and "The Sackett Brand" this family loyalty plays a large part in the story. Louis himself claims to have gained most of the idea when two strangers helped him out of a tight spot. He asked them why the people who wouldn't have hesitated to attack him wouldn't fight those two, and the two answered that they had more than 30 cousins between them--fight them and you fight their families. While the traditional westerns are still favorites, the Sackett series gives the reader a chance to keep close to old characters while exploring other aspects of America's frontier history.
People in the middle colonies had varied lifestyles and participated in many different religions. The reasons for the variety of cultures is due to the fact that the people of the Middle colonies came from many different countries. Despite this the variety of people's backgrounds, social life still revolved around the village or city one lived in. Market towns were extremely important in the Middle colonies because people needed to go to town to trade the products they grew or made. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------They were quakers