About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 49. Chapters: Grace Raymond Hebard, Curt Gowdy, Andrew Kerr, Penny Wolin, Bill Flores, Cynthia Lummis, Mildred Harris, Stanley K. Hathaway, George Jay Wienbarg, Samuel C. Phillips, John C. Ostlund, William T. Kane, Ralph S. Johnson, Solomon Trujillo, Dan Zwonitzer, Thomas E. Trowbridge, John Frullo, Dean T. Prosser, Larry Birleffi, Leonard McEwan, Charles E. Richardson, Scott Avett, James Johnson, Robert Schliske, Alvin Wiederspahn, Larry D. Shippy, Dean M. Kelley, Seth Avett, Bryan Pedersen, Richard V. Thomas, Doc Middleton, Edgar Herschler, Sid Laverents, Kevin D. Randle, Matt Mead, Joseph M. Carey, Acquanetta, George Clayton Johnson, Marlin McKeever, John Godina, Thomas Mathias Lenihan, Joseph D. Selby, Tom Sansonetti, Patricia MacLachlan, Edwin H. Whitehead, Shirley E. Flynn, Tracy Ringolsby, Rita Meyer, Arloa Reston, Nanette Kay Laughrey, Jim Siedow, Jack R. Gage, Cecilia Hart, Rink Babka, Jennifer Nichols, Shane Drury, Rick Sofield, Tony Andruzzi, Sam Burley, Carolyn DeHoff, Max Maxfield, Don Cockroft, Ken Esquibel, Melba Ogle, Don Alley, Dennis DeBarr, Gail O'Brien, Don Westbrook. Excerpt: Grace Raymond Hebard (July 2, 1861 - October 1936) gained prominence as a Wyoming historian, suffragist, pioneering scholar, prolific writer, political economist and noted University of Wyoming educator. Hebard's standing as a historian in part rose from her years trekking Wyoming's high plains and mountains seeking first-hand accounts of Wyoming's early pioneers. Today her books on Wyoming history are sometimes challenged due to Hebard's tendency to romanticize the Old West, spurring questions regarding accuracy of her research findings. In particular, her conclusion after decades of field research that Sacajawea (participant in the Lewis and Clark Expedition) was buried in Wyoming's Wind River Indian Reservation is called into question...