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Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association

Buildings and structures completed in 1923National Register of Historic Places in Laramie County, WyomingWarehouses in the United StatesWyoming Registered Historic Place stubs
Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association
Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association

The Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association, at 1122 W. 23rd St. in Cheyenne, Wyoming, was built in 1923. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.In 2002 it was the home of "Antiques Central". It is a two-story brick masonry factory/warehouse with a flat roof. It originally consisted of a north half 56 by 32 feet (17.1 m × 9.8 m) in plan and a south half 64 by 33.5 feet (19.5 m × 10.2 m) in plan, built on a raised concrete foundation with a full basement.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association
West 23rd Street, Cheyenne

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.136944444444 ° E -104.82527777778 °
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Address

West 23rd Street 714
82001 Cheyenne
Wyoming, United States
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Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association
Laramie County Milk Producers Cooperative Association
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Cheyenne Flour Milling Company
Cheyenne Flour Milling Company

The Cheyenne Flour Milling Company, also known as the Standard Oil Company and Salt Creek Freightways, is an early warehouse building in Cheyenne, Wyoming. The structure was built in 1927 to house goods brought to and from Cheyenne by the Union Pacific Railroad in an industrial section of Cheyenne as a flour mill, replacing structures that had performed similar functions since 1915. By 1931 the building was shared by a warehouse for electrical parts for the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company, a potato chip factory and a chemical products company. In 1937-38 the Standard Oil Company started to use the warehouse for bulk petroleum products storage, continuing to 1963. From 1963 the building was used by Salt Creek Freightways, which had shared use from 1936. In 1973 it became a plumbing parts warehouse, and by 2003 was owned and used by a general contractor.The oldest section of the L-shaped building is a one-story masonry building, 40 feet (12 m) by 32 feet (9.8 m), with a flat roof. A brick two-story section dates to 1927 and measures 70 feet (21 m) by 32 feet (9.8 m). This section has a stepped parapet. A cone-story concrete block addition was built in 1936, measuring about 36 feet (11 m) by 16 feet (4.9 m). Another brick addition abuts the connector, and appears to have been built as an office. Some of the masonry exhibits fire damage, attributed to its time as a potato chip factory. The facades retain a number of painted signs for the businesses that operated there.The complex was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.