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Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin community halls tour to promote preservation efforts

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Kathleen Shannon

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(Wyoming News Service) The Sage Creek Community Club is 100 years old this year and is one stop on a tour this weekend of similar buildings in the region.

The small, white clapboard structure east of Cody, Wyoming, is an unassuming building tucked in sage brush just off U.S. Highway 14, with a lot of history. In a rural area populated by farmers, the club was a vital hub for community events; often dinners in the basement and country dances upstairs, featuring a live band on the stage.

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Cheryl Darling has been part of the club since she moved her family to the area in 1971.

"There's two beautiful historic drops that roll down as curtains for the stage," Darling noted. "One of them is of a landscape scene painted by one of the early, early members. And then the other one is early advertising of the whole Cody country."

The club is the first stop on a driving tour this Saturday of four Bighorn Basin community halls. Halls like these were constructed in the 1920s and '30s, sometimes via Depression-era programs like the Works Progress Administration or the Civilian Conservation Corps.

Darling pointed out the club made the Wyoming Historic Registry last year and is currently in the process of getting on the National Register of Historic Places.

"People can go and see what the history was of these different buildings and how they got started," Darling explained. "It just falls back to the preservation of our traditions and our historical values."

Official historic designations provide funding for continued upkeep so the structure can be used for more modern community events, too, like graduation parties, weddings and 4-H Club events.