Name: Fort Steele
County: Carbon
Authority Name:
GNIS Entry
Longitude: 1065647W
Latitude: 414641N
Legal Description:
Elevation: 6489/1978
(ft/m)
Feature Type: Populated Place
Origin of Name:
The town of Fort Steele derives its name from Fort Fred Steele, an army post established here in 1866 to guard the Union Pacific Railroad against Indians. At the time of the Meeker massacre, in the early eighties, it was from Fort Fred Steele that the unfortunate force commanded by Maj. Thornburg was sent to put down the uprising. Maj. Thornburg and most of his command never returned. That any of them survived was due to the dispatch of a second expedition from the fort to their relief. There is little about the town now to suggest the troublous Indian times. It serves as a place of supply for sheep herders and for the farms scattered up and down North Platte River wherever the valley is wide enough to be cultivated. The North Platte, from which the railroad diverged at the city of North Platte, 291 miles west of Omaha, is reached again at Fort Steele, 384 miles west of North Platte and 3,705 feet higher.
To the left (south) as the train crosses the bridge over the North Platte at Fort Steele may be seen a sawmill which works timber cut in the mountains and floated down the river. This mill produces many railroad ties and mine props from timber grown in the Medicine Bow and Hayden National Forests.
Source: Guidebook of the Western United States
Other Names:
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History:
Fort Fred Steele Post Office was established in July, 1868 and discontinued in April, 1967. Its mail was then handled by Rawlins Post Office.
Source: Wyoming Post Offices
Station on the Union Pacific Railroad and Fort Fred Steele postoffice, in Carbon County, 16 miles east of Rawlins. Location of the Carbon Timber Co.'s sawmills and box factory, employing 75 men. Stockraising the leading industry. Good hunting and fishing.
Source: Wyoming State Business Directory, 1910-11
Stories:
Maps:
1:24000 Quadrangle: Fort Steele
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