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New Fork, Wyoming

Coordinates: 42°42′13″N 109°42′55″W / 42.70361°N 109.71528°W / 42.70361; -109.71528
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New Fork
Abandon building in New Fork, Wyoming
New Fork, Wyoming is located in Wyoming
New Fork, Wyoming
New Fork, Wyoming is located in the United States
New Fork, Wyoming
LocationSublette County, Wyoming
Nearest cityBoulder, Wyoming
Coordinates42°42′13″N 109°42′55″W / 42.70361°N 109.71528°W / 42.70361; -109.71528
ArchitectChris Brandt, John Vible
NRHP reference No.87000773
Added to NRHPJuly 16, 1987[1]

New Fork is a ghost town in Sublette County, Wyoming, United States, near Boulder. It was one of the earliest settlements in the upper Green River valley. New Fork was established in 1888 by John Vible and Louis Broderson, Danish immigrants who had arrived in the United States in 1884. They established a store along the Lander cut-off of the Oregon Trail. By 1908 a small town had grown around the store, and in 1910 Vible built a dance hall, called The Valhalla.

In the early years of the settlement, the local Bannock and Shoshoni Indians from the Wind River Indian Reservation accounted for much of the town's trade. Vible and Broderson's original store was a log cabin, selling supplies obtained in Evanston.[2]

The death of Vible and members of his family from diphtheria and scarlet fever in 1915 started a decline, exacerbated by the abandonment of the Lander cut-off. Mail service stopped in 1918.[3]

Several log and frame buildings remain in the townsite.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ Rosenberg, Robert G. (July 31, 1986). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form". National Park Service. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
  3. ^ "New Fork". National Register of Historic Places. Wyoming State Preservation Office. October 16, 2008.
[edit]
  • New Fork at the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office