Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Ex-Evansville mayor’s experiences show why good folks don’t get into politics
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist, 89th Edition. Sidewalks and flags.
An interesting episode in Evansville:
‘This is awesome’: Casper organizes to cover up swastika display in Evansville
And an episode all played out against the background of the state's GOP going increasingly to the very far right.
I'll note that this is "Pride Month". As I've noted before, I don't really get pride month for a bunch of reasons, one simple one being I don't see how a person can be "proud" of their sexual drive. That just seems odd to me. My views on the topic are found in the related thread links below, and a person can read them if they're interested.
I'm also kind of in the camp of the months just being the months, although I do see why Black History Month and Women's History Month got started to focus attention.
Anyhow, over time, Prime Month, which originally was limited to homosexuality, expanded out to LGBTQ, and that's another topic. L G & Q are related topics, but T is really a seperate one entirely, a fact that has caused some Ls to be upset by being included with Ts, and understandably so.
Anyhow, that's the topic of the post.
As noted, this is Pride Month and the Mayor of Evansville, on her own volition, put out small rainbow flags at the Evansville Town Hall. She noted that it represented a municipal spirit of acceptedness, although it was not a municipal act. It was a private one.
This shows something really interesting in general. For native Wyomingites, the view towards LGBTQ topics long was "I don't care what you do, just leave me alone". That's the native Wyoming view on a lot of things.
For this reason, for decades, locals in this community would find themselves in the grocery store line with a man wearing a tutu (I'm sincere on this), and think, "um. . .whatever". Or in my case, "um. . . poor taste in dresses".
The current right wing populist view, however, is very much "I care exactly what you are doing and I'm going to force you to stop doing it".
For locals, therefore, this entire topic has been a bit odd. There's been the movement towards "you must accept", which is generally met with "What? I wasn't bothering you" while also being met with "you must stop them", which has been met with "Why? They weren't bothering me".
Anyhow, the mayor put out flags.
This was, in turn, met with the actions of one Evansville resident who went out and drew swastikas on the sidewalk in protest. In addition, he threatened to purchase German swastika flags and put them out.
Why swastikas?
Well, nobody can really figure that one out. Asked about it in a town work session, he replied:
Yeah, there’s a difference. I’m not that stupid, but what I’m doing here is to make a point.
And what is that point?
Hard to figure.
Anyhow, Evansville residents reacted by having a sidewalk chalk fest. Seems about the best possible reaction, really.
A lesson here is that street level Wyoming isn't nearly as far right as GOP. At some point, that probably begins to have an effect.
Another lesson may very well be that the center needle on this has moved on, giving us an example of Yeoman's Twenty First Law of Behavior for the second time in two days. If that's the case, social conservatives will have a pretty hard time actually moving things back to where they want, as that requires a cultural change, and that change may have already taken place in the opposite direction.
Somewhat related, Wyoming's lone Congressman is backing a bill in Congress to change Pride Month (and I don't know how it ended up being called that) to "Family Month". A Hageman Facebook post stated:
This June, I am proud to cosponsor Rep. Mary Miller's resolution to officially declare June as Family Month.
It is time to reject radical ideologies and honor traditional family values that have shaped our country for generations.
A press release said something similar.
Some Facebook wag posted in reply:
Where's your Hageman family picture?
Related threads:
On Pride Month, the nature of Pride, and compelling opinions.
Lex Anteinternet: Pride and Unintended Consequences and the really unknowable views of Donald Trump.
Last edition:
Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist, 88th Edition. A predictive issue and other ramblings. Order coming on women in combat roles. Trump's bolt shot.
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Thursday, July 6, 1922. Casper and Oil
The big news in Casper was that the Texas Company, generally referred to as Texaco, was coming to Casper. It would build a refinery on the edge of what became Evansville, referred to in these articles as the lands belonging to the Evans Holding Company.
Saturday, March 30, 2019
Today In Wyoming's History: Richard's (Reshaw's) Bridge, Evansville Wyoming.
Richard's (Reshaw's) Bridge, Evansville Wyoming.
Reshaw's Bridge, or more correctly Richard's Bridge, was a frontier North Platte River crossing only a few miles downstream from Platte Bridge and like it, it was guarded by a contingent of soldiers. As noted in the plaque below, it ultimately closed in favor of the slightly newer Guinard's Bridge, which Richard bought, which ultimately came to be referred to as Platte Bridge.
In 1866, after the bridge had been abandoned, it was dismantled by the soldiers stationed at Platte Bridge Station.
While Platte Bridge Station is remembered for the battle that occurred there, Reshaw's Bridge saw its fair share of action as well.
Richard's Bridge Cemetary Mausoleum, Evansville Wyoming
Saturday, May 26, 2018
More folks leave the state in 2017 (are we really that upset about that. . . and what's going on?)
Of course, that figure is more than a little off as in the last 20 years Bar Nunn has really grown and so has Mills, so those figures are more than a little offset by the two adjoining communities which make up the larger metropolitan area, together with Evansville.
Still, that's pretty interesting as the price of oil was claiming at the same time.
That might mean something, or nothing at all.
Eh?
That Casper in particular and Wyoming in general lost population in the last several years is no surprise, but in 2017 petroleum and coal prices were stable. For that matter, petroleum prices climbed. Based on the old model, that should have meant a slow climb in employment figures, but it appears we really aren't seeing that. Why not?
Well, we actually may be. They may must just not be as much as expected and there could be an attendant fall in other areas. But it could also be due to technology.
One thing that has really been missed in the analysis and close watching of petroleum prices is that insiders in the industry have been predicting that when the price of oil climbed and exploration picked up, the return of the exploration end of the industry would feature a much more high tech industry than previously.
Almost completely missed, but well known to those who are familiar with the industry, is the fact that the last boom featured a combination of a lot of new equipment and a mass amount of old. When the directional drilling boom hit the United States did not have a lot of high tech rig within its boundaries. We tend not to think of ourselves like this, but our exploration infrastructure really went back to the 1970s. Given the price of oil between the 1970s and the 1990s there had been no real reason to have high tech rigs in the US, but they did exist. They were in use in the hot oil provinces overseas. Indeed, some workers who returned to the US to work in the 1990s boom were shocked about how primitive the industry was here, even as new fracking and directional technologies came in. One such worker I know wanted to return to the Middle East to work just because he found American rigs so primitive and dangerous.
Things will be different this time. New rigs started to come in during the 1990s and they are out there now. As the industry contracted recently it meant the old stuff could go. Insiders feel that the old stuff won't be coming back.
Does that meant that a predicted drilling boom like that predicted for Converse County will have no impact on the workforce? Not hardly. But it may wall mean that predictions regarding that could be off significantly. And where that boom may be felt may be quite off the mark. The petroleum industry, much like other sectors of the economy, may start to be a lot more clicks and storkes than nuts and bolts that it use to be.
Before we leave this, there's a couple of other interesting aspects of this. One is that at least in Casper the building seems to go on and on even while the population is falling. It makes no sense at all unless the developers are gambling that there's going to be a big increase in the local population as the drilling starts in the neighboring county. South Casper has an apartment building going up that, by my uneducated guess, would easily house 1/5th of the entire number of people predicted to be coming in. Subdivisions continue to be developed, although at a much slower pace than previously.
Learning what is going on in the real estate industry at any one time is darned near impossible as the industry, like most others, has no real interest in being too open about market conditions at any one time. However, it can't possibly be the case that there are waiting residents for all of these homes at the same time the population of the town is declining. If this gamble doesn't pay off for them, there's going to be a real vacant building mess.
Regarding the use of the term "mess", one thing that might not be regarded as a mess, among long time residents, is the decline in population. It's a dirty little secret of the local view, but quite frankly, most long time or native Wyomingites don't cry about declining population figures. Indeed, if you look where people are free to comment anonymously, they tend to be happy about it. The way that most Wyomingites figure it a declining population means that a lot of Texans, Oklahoman's and the like went back home and left those of us from here, here. And most Wyomingites are okay with that.
Which gets us back to a different economy, such as Galeotos has been talking about, and like we've talked about before here. It's hardly articulated, but what Wyomingites hope for is not so much that any one sector does super, but rather that there are enough jobs for people who grow up here and want to stay. That's a pretty difficult thing to achieve, but that's what folks generally hope for. The booming dreams of politicians tend not to really reflect their views very much.
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Friday, May 31, 2013
Wardewll Field. Casper's second airport.
Photograph courtesy of Wyoming State Archives.
Neat photograph of the big hanger at Wardwell Field, Casper's second airport (many believe it was the first, but a field in what is now Evansville was actually the first). Today, the hanger is used by a boat vendor, and the runways are streets for Bar Nunn.
Interesting to see it actually in use, with some fairly substantial aircraft. This airfield continued to serve Casper until either the late 1940s or the early 1950s, at which time the government granted the airfield built during World War Two to the county, which is now the Natrona County International Airport. The area depicted above still has an airfield in the vicinity, however, that being Hartford Field, which is a small private airfield just across the highway.
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