The Long Asphalt Trail (July/August 1994 | Volume: 45, Issue: 4)

The Long Asphalt Trail

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Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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July/August 1994 | Volume 45, Issue 4

 

Traveling west on the Wyoming stretch of Interstate 80 (which extends from New York to San Francisco), I found that the headline of what might be the most floridly evocative ad ever written kept sounding in my mind. “Somewhere west of Laramie,” starts this sales pitch for a 1920s automobile, the Jordan Playboy, “there’s a bronco-busting, steer-roping girl.” Of course, she drives the Jordan, “a sassy pony that’s a cross between greased lightning and the place where it hits.” On an afternoon in mid-June I, too, was headed somewhere west of Laramie, but not exactly into the romantic “red horizon of a Wyoming twilight” promised by the ad. Instead, I was trying out a concept thought up and named Tracks Across Wyoming by the business and tourism interests of a half-dozen towns along the state’s southern tier. This itinerary is meant to slow down the driver who simply wants to get from here to there—to speed through the seemingly drab fourhundred-mile run of highway, stopping nowhere, except, perhaps, to veer north at its western edge to follow the crowds to the scenic glories of Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons.

Tracks hopes to lure train travelers too. Since Amtrak returned to the state in 1991, riding the Union Pacific rails that in most places parallel I-80, such towns as Cheyenne, Laramie, Rock Springs, Evanston, and Green River hope that when the Pioneer stops on its run from Chicago to Seattle, passengers will alight to spend a day or so before resuming their trips.

These rugged communities, once known as end-of-tracks towns, have lived and nearly died by the imperative of the railroad. In a matter of moments, in 1867, they sprang to life as workers pushed the Union Pacific tracks west. Cheyenne, later the state capital, swelled from a population of a few hundred in July 1867 to about four thousand merchants, laborers, speculators, and—as everyone around here likes to remind you—“soiled doves” by November.

In his good, plainspoken guide to the state, the historian Nathaniel Burt claims, “Wyoming’s towns are for use rather than for show.” But that’s not entirely true. They are for show; you just have to build in a little time, swing off the highway on a regular basis, and you’ll see what the Tracks people have in mind. For example, Pine Bluffs, in the state’s southeastern corner, population one thousand, is a major archeological site, occupied for centuries by High Plains Nomads. The graduate-student guide at the High Plains Archeological Lab in the center of town described her now tiny community as a “frontier crossroads. Any group you can think of came through here,” she said. Digging goes on each summer on a bluff overlooking I-80, just west of town. If you stop off, one of the student archeologists will happily put down his or her shovel for a few minutes to explain what’s happening.

At Fossil Butte National Monument, near Kemmerer, another end-of-tracks town, evidence of the teeming