Upcoming Holiday Closures:
The AHC Public Services and Reading Room will be closed Saturday December 21st through Wednesday January 1st
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Notes from back of photo: "Hugh Clark with young Steamboat"
A. S. “Bud” Gillespie was an Albany County, Wyoming, rancher and co-author with R. H. Burns and Willing G. Richardson of the book Wyoming’s Pioneer Ranches. Gillespie was born in 1887. Bud Gillespie worked as a cowboy for the Swan Land and Cattle Company and gained fame as a rodeo performer during the early 1900s. He took over operation of the Gillespie ranch on the Laramie River in 1914 and bought the former Taylor ranch on Rock Creek in 1922. After his retirement he moved to Laramie, Wyoming, and became an authority and writer on the history of Albany County. The collection contains correspondence, manuscripts, an oral interview on tape, artifacts, and photographs documenting ranch, rodeo, and cowboy life in southern Wyoming, primarily from the early 1900s.
Explore the Archives West Andrew Springs Gillespie papers inventory.
More than 100 years ago, Grace Raymond Hebard—UW faculty member, administrator, librarian, and Wyoming historian—began collecting the papers and reminiscences of Wyoming’s pioneers. Her research on the history of Wyoming, the West, emigrant trails, and Native Americans became the nucleus for what is known today as the American Heritage Center (AHC). Officially established in 1945, the Center now holds over 90,000 cubic feet of historic documents and artifacts in more than 3500 collections—placing the AHC among the largest non-governmental archives in the nation.
Today, the AHC contains important holdings in numerous areas. Its western history archives include materials on early women’s suffrage and political achievements, native Americans, ranching, politics, authors, and under-documented communities. Other featured collecting areas include transportation (railroad, highway and air travel), mining and energy extraction, entertainment and popular culture (with important collections featuring Hollywood, music, radio, television and the comic book industry), natural resources and the environment, and military history. The AHC also serves as the primary archives for the University of Wyoming. Connect with us on our social media platforms - Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Virmuze, and our blog - where we are #ALWAYS ARCHIVING.
Phone: (307) 766-3756
Fax: (307) 766-5511
Email: ahcref@uwyo.edu
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Parking in the Centennial Complex lot is free, but patrons must park only in the area of the lot with the signage that states "CENTENNIAL COMPLEX 2HR VISITOR PARKING". Ares with "RED PERMIT" signage are exclusively reserved for University of Wyoming parking permits and patrons will be subject to fines in this area of the lot without a valid permit during the normal Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. business hours of the university. For visitations lasting longer than 2 hours a free temporary parking permits can be obtained by inquiring at the following locations:
Once obtained, these permits must be promptly displayed on the dashboard or in the front windshield of a vehicle to avoid a fine for overstaying the 2-hour parking limit.
Centennial Complex
2111 Willet Drive
Laramie, WY 82071
For US Postal Service:
American Heritage Center
University of Wyoming
1000 E. University Ave.
Dept. 3924
Laramie, WY 82071
For UPS & FedEx:
American Heritage Center
University of Wyoming
16th & Gibbon Street
Laramie, WY 82071
Attn: Bill Hopkins