Douglas is located on the banks of the
North Platte River, and is named for U.S. Senator
Stephen A. Douglas. The city grew after it was designated a stop on the
Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad. Railroads brought settlers and pioneers west; some stayed and others continued on. Douglas' location affords excellent access to nearby sights.
Medicine Bow National Forest is located nearby, as is
Thunder Basin National Grassland and
Ayres Natural Bridge. The former
Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad Passenger Depot in Douglas is included on the
National Register of Historic Places. The Douglas
Chamber of Commerce, part of the
Douglas Railroad Interpretive Center is located in the depot. The free of charge exhibition outside contains eight railroad vehicles, one steam locomotive with tender and seven cars.
Wyoming State Fair Main Entrance Each August Douglas hosts the
Wyoming State Fair. The fair includes a carnival midway, live entertainment, and a
rodeo. On August 12, 2009, the fair hosted country music star
John Anderson. The centennial fair in 2012 attracted sixty thousand persons, large by Wyoming standards; the
Dierks Bentley concert was the first ever sold-out show in the fair.
Horse culture Since Fort Fetterman days, Douglas has been a center of American horse culture. The first winner of American racing's
Triple Crown, thoroughbred
Sir Barton, is buried here. The Wyoming State Fair is known for its rodeo and animal competitions. Also on the fairgrounds is the
Wyoming Pioneer Memorial Museum, a collection of pioneer and Native American relics pertaining to the history of Converse County.
Jackalopes In 1932, the
jackalope legend in the United States was attributed by
The New York Times to Douglas Herrick (1920−2003) of Douglas, and thus the city was named the "Home of the Jackalope" by the state of Wyoming in 1985. Douglas has issued Jackalope Hunting licenses to tourists. The tags are good for hunting during official Jackalope season, which occurs for only one day, June 31. According to the Douglas Chamber of Commerce, a 1930s hunting trip for jackrabbits led to the idea of a Jackalope. Herrick and his brother had studied
taxidermy by mail order as teenagers. When the brothers returned from a hunting trip, Herrick tossed a jackrabbit carcass into the taxidermy shop, which rested beside a pair of
deer antlers. The accidental combination of
animal forms sparked Douglas Herrick's idea for a jackalope. ==Education==