Lost Cabin, Wyoming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lost Cabin is an unincorporated community in Fremont County, Wyoming, United States.[1]
A post office called Lost Cabin was established in 1886, and remained in operation until 1966.[2] The community received its name from a pioneer incident in which a party of prospectors escaped from Native Americans, only to find later their cabins had disappeared from the site.[3]
In popular culture
In his poem The Ballad of Jesus Ortiz, Dana Gioia describes how his great-grandfather, a Mexican immigrant from Sonora, worked as a Wild West cow-puncher and was later murdered by a disgruntled and racist patron while working as a saloon keeper at Lost Cabin in 1910.[4]
References
- ↑ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lost Cabin, Wyoming
- ↑ "Post Offices". Jim Forte Postal History. Retrieved January 5, 2017.
- ↑ Moyer, Armond; Moyer, Winifred (1958). The origins of unusual place-names. Keystone Pub. Associates. p. 79.
- ↑ John Zheng (2021), Conversations with Dana Gioia, University of Mississippi Press. Pages 234-238.
Municipalities and communities of Fremont County, Wyoming, United States | ||
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| Cities | ||
| Towns | ||
| CDPs | ||
| Unincorporated communities | ||
| Ghost town | ||
| Indian reservation | ||
43°17′11″N 107°37′57″W / 43.28639°N 107.63250°W / 43.28639; -107.63250
