Underrated Interstate Attractions for RV Road Trips: Rawlins, Wyoming

 

You never know what you’ll find when you exit the interstate. If you find yourself on Interstate 80 in Wyoming, make a stop in Rawlins. It could be one of America’s most underrated interstate attractions for RV road trips. The small community is well hidden from drivers but worth a stay.

America’s Underrated Interstate Attractions for RV Road Trips: Rawlins, Wyoming

underrated attractions for RVers Scenery around Rawlins. Image Courtesy of the Carbon County Visitors Council

This little gem holds plenty of adventure. In a state with just six people per square mile, there’s a surprising amount of things to do here. Rawlins is located about midway between the Utah and Nebraska borders. The small community is stashed among rolling fields of sagebrush and high desert terrain.

Like all frontier towns caught in the crosshairs of America’s interstate travel system, the community’s most attractive features are reserved for intrepid RVers willing to exit the highway for a day or more.

Why Rawlins is Great for RVers

underrated attractions for RVers Rawlins has three full-service RV parks. Image: LiveWorkDream.com

Founded in 1867 by US Army General John A. Rawlins, it’s the county seat with fewer than 10,000 residents. Yet Rawlins has everything RVers need for overnight camping or longer stays. Check into one of the three highly rated Rawlins RV parks. Gather supplies at the many great independently-owned family businesses or stock up at the local big box stores. And plan on staying a while to explore attractions like:

The Wyoming Frontier Prison Museum

underrated attractions for RVers Take a gas chamber selfie at the Wyoming Frontier Prison. Image Courtesy of the Carbon County Visitors Council

Pay a nominal entry fee and take a selfie in a real gas chamber. You can touch the eerie gallows or step inside cell blocks of the Wyoming Frontier Prison. Open for business in 1901, over 13,000 inmates lived there for eighty years. Many served hard time producing goods ranging from brooms, to shirts to blankets in one of the U.S. prison system’s earliest examples of for-profit prison labor.

You’ll get an authentic feel for Wyoming prison life. Tour guides give a terrifying look into the harsh sentences of captive men (and a few women) who endured some of the harshest punishments around. The prison had a dungeon and a “punishment pole” to which men were handcuffed and whipped with rubber hoses, according to the Wyoming Prison Museum website.

The Carbon County Museum

Dead Man's Shoes Rawlins Wyoming America’s “Dead Man’s Shoes” are displayed in Rawlins. Image: LiveWorkDream.com

Rawlins is the last place you’d expect to find a pair of dress shoes made from human skin, but that’s exactly what you’ll see at the Carbon County Museum. The small building houses an impressive display of wild west Wyoming artifacts. Nowhere else can you see a pair of infamous shoes custom made from the hanged corpse of a notorious train robber and horse thief, George Francis Warden, a.k.a. “Big Nose George.”

Macabre attractions aside, you’ll also learn about local Native American culture, Thomas Edison’s lightbulb moment while fishing nearby, and see one of the original RVs, an authentic sheep wagon.

Historic Rawlins Architecture

Rawlins Historic District Walking Tour Rawlins has many historic homes. Image: LiveWorkDream.com

Fans of turn-of-the-century American architecture will appreciate the Rawlins Historic District. Take a stroll through the 15-block neighborhood featuring well-loved historic houses built between 1880 and 1915. You’ll see authentic Queen Anne, cottage and bungalow style homes in pristine shape.

Go Wild in Rawlins’ Scenery

underrated attractions for RVers Thousands of BLM acres surround Rawlins. Image: LiveWorkDream.com

Wyoming’s best outdoor destinations are scattered throughout the state. But one of the best reasons to explore the area lies within thousands of acres of BLM land surrounding Rawlins. The beautiful prairie, desert and mountain terrain is home to mule deer, antelope and bighorn sheep. Look up and you’ll spy golden and bald eagles, pelicans, and ferruginous hawks.

Cast a line in Teton Reservoir a few miles south of town. Take a drive 50 miles north to the Miracle Mile fishing hotspot at Kortes Reservoir.

Hike a segment of the Continental Divide Trail or go on a scenic Sunday drive. The BLM Seminoe-Alcova Back Country Byway from Rawlins to Casper is another epic way to spend an afternoon. There are just too many Carbon County drives and things to do in one visit.

Go Beyond the Intestate for Wyoming Adventure

The stark, empty feel of southern Wyoming terrain can get old when your only connection to it is what you see from Interstate 80. But if you have a day or a week to spend along this stretch, make a pit stop in Rawlins.The unexpected beauty of one of the most underrated interstate attractions for RV road trips through Wyoming will surprise you.

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