An abundance of fine pelts drew the first white men into the
valley, long held sacred by the Indians. The trappers' day
soon passed, and was succeeded by others, equally brief. Tie
cutters, cattle barons, and hunting expeditions came and went.
The
year of 1897 produced an electrifying change. A rich copper
strike in the Sierra Madres precipitated the new city of
Grand Encampment and several satellite settlements. The
smelter was supplied by a 16-mile aerial tramway-longest
in the world. Power was provided by water through a 4 foot
wooden pipeline. The S & E Railroad was constructed,
but its completion came a little late.
In
1908, the company which had produced two million dollars
in copper ore, was indicted for over-capitalization and
fraudulent stock sales. The mines closed, and Rudefeha,
Dillon, Copperton, Rambler, Battle and Elwood became ghost
towns. Encampment and Riverside survived but the "Grand" was
quietly dropped.
The Town of Encampment is nestled in south-central
Carbon County between the Sierra Madre and Snowy Range mountain
ranges in the south central part of the state. Located forty
miles south of Interstate 80 and 85 miles west of Laramie,
the tiny town is home to 443 people. Grand Encampment, as
it was originally known, served as an early day meeting place
for Indians and trappers. Later tie cutters, miners and cattlemen
came to the area. During the peak of the copper mining days
the town boasted a smelter, the world's longest aerial tramway,
and several thousand people. Smaller towns sprang up in several
locations near the larger mines. When the copper mining boom
ended just after the turn of the century, mines and towns
were abandoned and the population of Encampment shrunk. Today
Encampment is supported by the timber, ranching and recreation
industries.
Carbon
County is located in the south-central portion of Wyoming
and
is the third largest county in Wyoming. Its southern
boundary is the Wyoming/Colorado border. The Continental
Divide, which separates the eastern and western watersheds
of North America, runs north and south through the county.
The county is a study in contrasts - from snow-capped mountains
and high plateaus in the south & north, to vast prairie
lands in the east and the Red Desert basin in the west. Elevations
range from 5,000 feet in the Red Desert to 12,006 feet in
the Snowy Range.
Parts of the Medicine Bow National Forest, located in Carbon
County, offer a wide variety of year-round activities, including
camping, fishing,and snowmobiling. The valley of the North
Platte River in central Carbon County is one of the most
productive livestock-raising areas in Wyoming. Wildlife abounds
throughout the county and some of the finest fishing spots
are just an easy drive away. |