Railroads
The class titled "The Impact of the Railroad on Wyoming History" is team-taught in the fall semester, 2007, by Dr. Rob Godby, Department of Economics, and Dr. Phil Roberts, Department of History. The course consists of extensive readings in railroad and Western history as well as several field-trips to significant railroad sites in southeastern Wyoming.
Meeting times are 2:45 p.m.-4 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays in Ross Room 14.
The 2007 class visited the ruins of Carbon, the first coal-mining town in Wyoming, established in 1868.
The 2007 History of the Railroad class at UW is pictured on the site of the Dale Creek Trestle, at one time, the highest railroad bridge in the world when it was built by the Union Pacific Railroad in the winter of 1867-68. (Phil Roberts photo)
The class toured the Union Pacific Railroad steam locomotive shops in Cheyenne. Lynn Nystrom conducted the tour.