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Wildfire Burns Harriet Hageman’s Family Homestead, More Evacuations…

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Wildfire Burns Harriet Hageman’s Family Homestead, More Evacuations…


UPDATE: Fire 30% Contained, Plans In The Works To Lift Evacuation Orders

U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, was teary-eyed and fought back her emotions talking about her family’s loss this week of her childhood home, which went up in flames when Wyoming’s largest wildfire roared through the Haystack Range.

The Hageman homestead, a rustic cabin-like structure with plastered walls and built into the side of a hill near McGinnis Pass, Wyoming, was destroyed by an uncontained wildfire in rough terrain littered with huge granite boulders and tinder fueled with juniper pinions woodland and sagebrush.

“It’s been pretty devastating,” Hageman told Cowboy State Daily.

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Back in Washington, D.C., doing what she does there, Wyoming’s lone U.S. House member was preoccupied with upsetting late-night telephone conversations with her brother Hugh and older sister Julia in Torrington, who lives closest to their 100-year-old mother, Marion, in a local nursing home.

Matriarch of the family, Marion Hageman, hasn’t fully grasped the family’s devastation.

“I just saw her a couple of days ago when I was home. I’m not even sure she even knows about this fire yet,” said Hageman of her mother.

“It was a very old log house, with very thick walls because they didn’t split the wood. It was very cold in the wintertime,” she recalled. “We had one woodburning stove, and we would take Montgomery Ward catalogs when we were younger and put them on the stove and heat them through, and then wrap them in fabric and take them to bed to stay warm.”

Wind Shifts, More Evacuations

Meanwhile, by Friday evening the wind had shifted, prompting an urgent notice from Platte County officials for residents in the tiny town of Hartville and nearby Whalen Canyon to evacuate, their second in less than a week.

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“Attention!!! Residents of Hartville and Whalen Canyon Evacuate Now!” reads a Platte County Sheriff’s Office Facebook post. “The winds have changed and the fire is advancing west. Pleasant Valley residents begin evacuation process.”

The evacuation notice also came with the announcement of local road closures, specifically for Highway 270, Whalen Canyon Road and Pleasant Valley Road.

As of 9:06 p.m. Friday, “Fire crews have been able to regain control of the fire at this time,” the sheriff’s office reported.

Among those who were quickly evacuated were the staff, volunteers and animals at the Kindness Ranch Animal Sanctuary.

“This evening we had to make the difficult decision to evacuate Kindness Ranch,” the sanctuary posted to its Facebook page. “The fire was picked up by the wind and headed our direction.”

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All the people and animals were hustled out safely, and the “large animals (are) houses safely in metal buildings with lots of food, water and a dedicated small number of staff staying back and caring for them,” the ranch says. “We are all safe, the animals and humans.”

The wildfire as of late Friday was also upgraded from a little over 23,000 acres to 25,000 acres burned in a huge swath of flatland and hills leading into the Haystack Range.

The fire is stuck to the north of U.S. Highway 26 in the Haystacks with no containment, according to a statement issued Friday afternoon by Tyson Finnicum, a spokesman for the Wyoming State Forestry Division.

On right, U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, stands next to her nephew before the Pleasant Valley Fire burned her homestead home down. The home in background is where Hageman grew up as a young girl. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)

Family Roots

It’s an area Hageman knows well.

It’s where her roots are.

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Hagemans are everywhere in this part of Wyoming.

One brother lives by the historic Fort Laramie near the North Platte River. Another brother lives out along U.S. Highway 26 about 4 miles west of Fort Laramie where the fire roared along the main thoroughfare on Wednesday.

Nephews, nieces and sons-in-law live everywhere around the Cowboy State.

Harriet Hageman played in the Haystacks and grew up there on the family homestead until she was 7 years old, after which time her family moved closer to Fort Laramie so that she and her siblings could participate in sports and other school activities.

“We grew up in an area we referred to as ‘The Hills,’” Hageman said. “We grew up in the Haystacks, and in a house that was on the Cheyenne to Deadwood stage trail. It was an old, old home, you know, 100-plus years old.”

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For sure, the former stage route has a colorful past.

According to the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office, the stage route was in operation from 1876 to 1887 between Cheyenne and Deadwood, South Dakota. Thousands of passengers, tons of freight and express and millions of dollars in gold passed over this trail until the railroad came.

During the years the trail was in use, it was the scene of numerous Indian and outlaw plunderings.

The home, said an emotional Hageman, was “very special to all of us.”

“That’s where we were all raised,” she added. “It burned.”

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‘It’s Devastating’

Hageman grew up with five other siblings, including brother Hugh whose ranch has smoldering fields that wrap around the home where the family moved later in life after their earlier times at the homestead in McGinnis Pass.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, firefighters, planes and helicopters dropping water and slurry halted the fire’s march to Fort Laramie near the canal 2 miles on the western edge of town.

About 8,000 acres of Hugh Hageman’s 25,000-to-30,000-acre spread burned, taking away some of the pasture needed for his 1,000 head of cattle.

“It’s devastating,” said Hugh Hageman when reached by Cowboy State Daily late Friday.

“I’m out here fighting the fire right now,” he said, adding he was working with brothers and other family members, plus 15 forestry service volunteers trying to keep the fire from spreading on the southern and eastern front of the Haystacks. “I can’t tell on the west side.”

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Hugh Hageman couldn’t confirm if any of the fire was contained, but he did believe it was more “controlled” as firefighters have encircled the fire with backburning to halt its spread on the eastern and southern fronts.

“We’re running a sprayer right now. We’re in the fire right now, doing some backburning,” he said. “We’ve got the fire surrounded now to keep it from coming back down from the hills.”

Hageman didn’t have a firetruck, but he did have his farm truck.

“We’ve got a little sprayer built just for this with a 500-gallon tank on the back. It’s putting out a lot of fire,” he said.

Late Friday, the congresswoman’s brother reflected on the family’s loss of their historic homestead.

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“It burned to the ground. There’s nothing left,” he said. “It’s kind of sad. It was a place where we all went back to. It was in pretty bad shape before the fire. No one lived there since the early 1970s.”

  • Mailbox still stands near Hugh Hageman’s home along U.S. Highway 26. Roughly 8,000 of his family’s 25,000 - 30,000 acres of land burned on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Pleasant Valley Fire.
    Mailbox still stands near Hugh Hageman’s home along U.S. Highway 26. Roughly 8,000 of his family’s 25,000 – 30,000 acres of land burned on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Pleasant Valley Fire. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)
  • At left, a windmill overlooks an old outbuilding near the homestead where U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. A potato cellar is in the foreground; center, more of the old homestead house; right, roughly 8,000 of the Hageman family’s 25,000-30,000 acres of land burned on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Pleasant Valley Fire.
    At left, a windmill overlooks an old outbuilding near the homestead where U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. A potato cellar is in the foreground; center, more of the old homestead house; right, roughly 8,000 of the Hageman family’s 25,000-30,000 acres of land burned on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Pleasant Valley Fire. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)
  • U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in an old homestead house near McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. The century old home burned down on Wednesday. Fire from behind the home burns closer.
    U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in an old homestead house near McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. The century old home burned down on Wednesday. Fire from behind the home burns closer. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)
  • The hills are on fire along U.S. Highway 26 between Guernsey and Fort Laramie, Wyoming.
    The hills are on fire along U.S. Highway 26 between Guernsey and Fort Laramie, Wyoming. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)
  • Above, U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in an old homestead house near McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. The century old home burned down on Wednesday.
    Above, U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, grew up in an old homestead house near McGinnis Pass, located about 8 miles north of Guernsey, Wyoming. The century old home burned down on Wednesday. (Courtesy Harriet Hageman)

Never Forget

The home may have been in bad shape, but the Hagemans have not forgotten their origins.

Harriet Hageman said that her parents had $200,000 in debt and had scraped together the money to buy the ranch land with the homestead back in 1962.

They had $35 left in their savings account.

“They just had nothing, but they built a very successful ranching operation over the years,” she said.

Her father, Jim Hageman, passed away in 2006 and is buried in a gravesite on “a little hill” probably about a half mile-away from her childhood home.

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Jim Hageman was a member of the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1983 until his death in 2006.

A Wonderful Life

“We had two bedrooms and six kids,” she said. “The baby always slept in mom and dad’s room, and my three sisters and I slept in one bedroom and my brother slept in the dining room.

“It was a wonderful place to grow up. We had rattlesnakes, we had chickens, we had a garden, we had cattle, we had sheep, we had horses. It was an incredible place to grow up.”

The homestead life didn’t offer many of today’s comforts.

“We didn’t have a telephone, we didn’t have a television,” she said. “We rode ponies all the time. It was a great place to grow up.”

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The simple life brought them close together.

“We were all very, very close with each other. We lived a kind of life almost straight out of the late 1800s. My parents were bound and determined to be ranchers,” she said. “You just really risk everything when you do it.”

Besides the Hageman children, her parents also helped raise more than 40 foster kids.

“They sent us all to college,” Hageman said of she and her siblings. “I think we’ve all been quite successful as a result of having that kind of an upbringing.”

An out-of-control wildfire burns close to the Kindness Ranch in eastern Wyoming.
An out-of-control wildfire burns close to the Kindness Ranch in eastern Wyoming. (Kindness Ranch via Facebook)

Gunnysack Times

The Pleasant Valley Fire isn’t Hageman’s first rodeo with wildfire.

“I grew up fighting fire in those hills. It’s not easy fighting fire in the Haystack hills,” she said. “You take a wet gunnysack in one hand and a shovel in the other, and you just basically try to beat it out before it gets out on the prairie. It’s incredibly hard work.”

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A gunnysack is a large sack made of a course fabric that can be used as a sandbag for erosion control or to hold grain, potatoes or some other agricultural product. The sacks are soaked with water to help fight grass fires in rural areas, like where the Hagemans lived.

The exact time of day that the Hageman homestead went up in flames isn’t known.

However, it is likely that it happened sometime Wednesday afternoon after the Haystack Fire and Pleasant Valley fires combined to form one big inferno now known as the Pleasant Valley Fire, which is what Hugh Hageman is fighting.

Since Wednesday, the fire has pulled back from U.S. Highway 26 and headed deep into the Haystack Range.

The burn area in the Haystack range is between the McGinnis Pass and McCann Pass in Goshen County at about 5,000 feet in elevation. The range passes are located east of Whalen Canyon Road in the county and are located about 6 miles apart.

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The southern end of the fire is about 8 miles to the northeast of Guernsey, the area where the Pleasant Valley fire first started.

Pat Maio can be reached at pat@cowboystatedaily.com.



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Wyoming’s Title X Family Planning network remains a critical part of the state’s health care system

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Wyoming’s Title X Family Planning network remains a critical part of the state’s health care system


When a clinic closes in Wyoming, it doesn’t just close a door; it can cut off access to care for entire communities.

For many residents, getting to a health care provider already means traveling long distances across multiple counties, and local clinics are often the only nearby option for basic health care. With one Title X Family Planning clinic in western Wyoming now closed, the challenge is becoming even more real for many people.

Reproductive and sexual health care is a key part of overall health, but it’s often one of the first services people lose access to when clinics close. Title X Family Planning is a federal program that helps people get essential preventive care, no matter their income. These clinics offer services like birth control, cancer screenings, STI and HIV testing, and care before pregnancy. They help people stay healthy, catch problems early, and plan for their futures.

The need is real. Wyoming’s Title X Family Planning network remains a critical part of the state’s health care system, helping bridge gaps in both access and affordability. With 9 clinics currently serving communities across the state, these providers cared for nearly 12,000 patients through more than 28,000 visits between 2022 and 2025. For many, these clinics are their only source of care: 49% of patients were uninsured, and nearly half were living at or below the federal poverty level.

In a state where distance and cost can both be barriers, affordable care is essential. About 14.6% of Wyoming women ages 19–44 are uninsured, higher than the national average. Title X clinics help meet this need by offering low- or no-cost care, while also connecting patients to referrals and additional health services when needed, ensuring more individuals can get the care they deserve.

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These clinics are also on the front lines of prevention. In recent years, they delivered more than 3,100 cervical cancer screenings and about 20,000 STI and HIV tests. Services like these support early detection and treatment, helping reduce the need for more serious and costly care down the line.

In rural states like Wyoming, once a clinic closes, it is very hard to bring it back. These clinics are more than buildings; they are part of the local health care system that keeps communities healthy.

The good news is that Title X Family Planning clinics are still open, working every day to serve their communities. The Wyoming Health Council supports this network of clinics and works to ensure that people across the state can access the care they need. Through partnerships, education, and community-based programs, the organization helps connect Wyoming residents to reproductive and sexual health services, no matter where they live.

In a state where distance, cost, and provider shortages all play a role, these clinics, and the work supporting them, are more than just a convenience. They are a lifeline. 

To help sustain this work and protect access to care across Wyoming, consider making a donation to the Wyoming Health Council.

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Donation Link: givebutter.com/WYTitleX

Required Federal Funding statement:
This project is supported by the Office of Populations Affairs (OPA) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Health (OASH) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award 1 FPHPA 006541-0-00 totaling $978,380 with 100 percent funded by OPA/OASH/HHS. The contents are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by OPA/OASH/HHS or the U.S. Government.


PAID FOR BY WYOMING HEALTH COUNCIL
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Casper approves Wyoming Boulevard property rezoning

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Casper approves Wyoming Boulevard property rezoning


CASPER, Wyo. — The Casper City Council voted Tuesday to approve on first reading a zoning change for a vacant 2.4-acre parcel located at 1530 SE Wyoming Boulevard, transitioning the property from residential to commercial use.

The ordinance reclassifies Lot 4 of the Methodist Church Addition from Residential Estate to General Business. Located between East 15th and East 18th streets, the irregular-shaped property has remained undeveloped since it was first platted in 1984.

While original plans for the subdivision envisioned a church and an associated preschool, Community Development Director Liz Becher reported those projects never materialized.

According to Becher, the applicant sought the rezoning to facilitate the potential installation of a cell tower or an off-premises sign. Under the new C-2 designation, a cell tower up to 130 feet in height is considered a permitted use by right, though any off-premises sign would still require a conditional use permit from the Planning and Zoning Commission. The applicant also owns the adjacent lot to the north, which the city rezoned to general business in 2021.

Becher said the change aligns with the “Employment Mixed Use” classification in the Generation Casper comprehensive land use plan. This designation typically supports civic, institutional and employment spaces.

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Despite the new zoning, the property remains subject to a subdivision agreement that limits traffic access. Entry and exit are restricted to right turns onto or from East 15th Street, and no access is permitted from East 18th Street.

The council will vote on two more readings of the ordinance before it is officially ratified.

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Two men detained in Wyoming in connection with deadly shooting at downtown Salt Lake hotel

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Two men detained in Wyoming in connection with deadly shooting at downtown Salt Lake hotel


Two men were detained in Wyoming in connection with a fatal shooting at a downtown Salt Lake hotel that killed one man.

Carlos Chee, 23, and Chino Aguilar, 21, were both wanted for first-degree felony murder after the victim, identified as Christian Lee, 32, was found dead in a room at the Springhill Suites near 600 South and 300 West.

According to warrants issued for their arrest, Chee and Aguilar met with Lee and another woman at the hotel to sell marijuana. During the alleged drug deal, Aguilar allegedly shot and killed Lee after he tried to grab at his gun.

MORE | Shootings

Investigators said they found Lee dead in the room upon arrival, as well as a single shell casing on the floor and a small amount of marijuana on the television stand.

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The woman told investigators she had met Chee on a dating app and that he agreed to come to the hotel to sell her marijuana. She had been hanging out with him in the room, which Lee rented for her to use, when Lee asked them to leave. Lee was then shot and killed following a brief confrontation.

Chee and Aguilar allegedly fled the scene in a 2013 Toyota Camry with a Texas license plate that was later found outside of Rock Springs, Wyoming just a few hours later.

The two men were taken into custody and detained at the Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office.

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