💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 3881.gmi captured on 2023-06-14 at 16:12:17. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Entire town of Buford, Wyo., for sale by sole resident

2012-03-14 09:20:08

By Eric Pfeiffer | The Sideshow

Lone Buford, Wyo., resident Don Sammons (AP/Michael Smith)

If you've got a spare $100,000, you could potentially become the owner of a

small Wyoming town that's set to be auctioned off next month by its sole

resident.

After more than 30 years of residing in the unincorporated community, town

"mayor" Don Sammons says it's finally time to move on.

"Don, 'The Mayor', is retiring after 20 wonderful years in his town," Sammons

writes on the website for his business, the Buford Trading Post, a gas station

and store. "This entire, income producing, town is for sale; the house, the

Trading Post, the former school house, along with all the history of this very

unique place."

Buford, located between Cheyenne and Laramie, was first founded in the 1860s

and was once home to an estimated 2,000 residents before the Transcontinental

Railroad was rerouted.

Sammons moved to Buford with his family in 1980. In 1992, he bought the Buford

Trading Post and has continued to preside as Buford's unofficial "mayor." Over

the years, members of Sammons' family gradually moved away until he was finally

left as the only resident.

"It was a great life for me and for my family," Sammons, 60, told the Wyoming

Tribune Eagle, adding that selling it on his own wouldn't do the town justice.

"I needed to find someone who is an expert in selling unique and one-of-a-kind

items." Buford, Wyoming's second-oldest town, was named after a Civil War

general.

Along with the above-mentioned items, whoever purchases Buford will also become

proprietor of his or her very own ZIP code, 82052.

And while Sammons is Buford's sole resident, he's hardly alone out there.

Sammons says the trading post is visited by roughly 1,000 customers per day.

A local advertisement for the forthcoming auction, hosted by Oklahoma-based

Williams and Williams, describes the sale as follows:

"Unique opportunity to acquire an entire town, along with the Buford Trading

post, an income-producing convenience and fuel store. Included in the auction

are 10+/- acres of land, five buildings including a 3 bedroom home, United

States post office boxes, plow and three vehicles. There is also a Union

Wireless cellular tower with lease, and parking area previously used by an

overnight shipping company for nighttime trailer switches."

"We're going to have a variety of people attracted to this property, based on

what it would mean to them," Williams and Williams' Chief Marketing Officer Amy

Bates told the Eagle.