Kane, Wyoming Explained

Kane is a ghost town that existed 2miles south of the confluence of the Shoshone River and the Bighorn River in Big Horn County, northern Wyoming, United States.

Kane started as a lumber shipping point. In 1832, wagon trains of Captain B.L.E. Bonneville passed through Kane. They were pulled by four mules, four horses, and four oxen. With this route, Bonneville established a trading post near Cody, but abandoned the project due to hostilities with local Indians.[1]

Submersion

Prior to the completion of the Yellowtail Dam in Montana in the 1960s, the residents of Kane sold their homes and land to the federal government. When the dam was completed the area surrounding Kane was flooded by the Bighorn Lake reservoir.

Kane Cemetery 44.8842°N -108.2094°W still exists in its original location, 1miles north of the rivers' confluence, and now within the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area, . Relatives of people buried in the cemetery may continue to be buried there. An idea, untrue, gained currency that the cemetery and its residents were relocated prior to the impoundment of water in the reservoir behind the dam.

External links

44.8436°N -108.2028°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: de Vries, Janet L.. Field Trip Road Logs. Crockett. Fred. Wyoming Geological Association 41st Field Conference. 1990. 38–39.