No, despite what a Wyoming atlas might say, the âShemale Brothers Ranchâ in Albany County isnât a real place.
What initially seemed like a case of 19th century gender-bending, when the ranch was founded, turned out to most probably be a misprint in the 2009 6th Edition of the DeLorme Atlas & Gazetteer of Wyoming.
The property is actually the âSchmale Brothers Ranchâ and is part of a network of ranches dating back to the 1880s. A later edition of the atlas makes that correction, said Vince Meyer of Cheyenne, who noticed the misnamed place in the atlas.
But just when the correction was made is unclear. The 2011 edition of the same gazetteer in the main branch of the Laramie County Public Library in Cheyenne also has the misprint.
Meyer told Cowboy State Daily he assumes that was the result of either a simple typo or a âbored cartographerâ messing around with that page.

Unexpected Thing To Find
Meyer said he enjoys exploring and backpacking all over Wyoming, and is always researching new places to go.
After recently setting his sights on adventure in the Shirly Basin and nearby, isolated parts of Albany County, he turned to one of his favorite research tools: A full-sized atlas.
Book atlases were once a staple for nearly every outdoors enthusiast and road-tripper. Theyâve since been largely replaced by map apps on cellphones, tablets and computers.
Electronic devices are great for getting the overall picture, Meyer said. But to really get down to the nitty-gritty lay of the land, particularly in Wyomingâs most remote areas, nothing beats the scale and detail of a printed map.
âYou canât replace that kind of map or scale if youâre trying to plan something out in detail,â Meyer said. âEspecially if youâre in Wyomingâs backcountry and youâve got long distances between towns or gas stations.â
And so it was during his research into Albany County and the Shirley Basin that he came across a tiny spot in an obscure corner of private land northeast of Laramie called âShemale Bros. Ranch.â
âIt was just a funny thing to find on a map,â he said. âI showed it to a couple of people, and we got a laugh out of it.â
True History
The oddity was enough to pique his interest. So, Meyer began looking for references to a âShemale Ranchâ in other atlases, and even other states.
âI looked at another companyâs book map, and there was no indication (of such a place),â he said. âI did some research, and nothing came up. I figured, maybe in Nevada thereâs a âShemale Ranch?â But nothing came up.â
He did, however, find out some of the probable true history of the Schmale Brothers Ranch at the same spot on apparently correct maps.
Itâs evidently part of a network of ranchers that started springing up in Albany County the late 19th century. The Schmale Ranch is listed as one of the properties that was eventually incorporated into the larger Q Creek Ranch, founded in the 1880s, according to the Q Creek Ranchâs website.
The University of Wyoming also lists an âAmanda S. And Oscar W. Schmale Scholarshipâ under its WyoScholarships program. According to UW, Oscar and Amanda Schmale, along with Oscarâs brother Emil, owned ranch property in the Bosler area. Thatâs near where the âShemale/Schmaleâ site is listed in Meyerâs atlases.

Nobody Complained To The State
If anybody else noticed the âShemaleâ typo, they werenât upset enough about it to call the state, according to the Maps and Records Division of the Wyoming Office of State Lands and Investments.Â
When contacted by Cowboy State Daily, the office reported it had received no notification of an Albany County property being mislabeled as âShemale Bros. Ranch.â
State mapmakers diligently cross-check each otherâs work, so mistakes are rare, but not entirely unheard of. Â
A request for comment from the DeLorme company wasnât answered by publication time.
Canât Get There From Here?
Meyer said heâd like to see the site for himself someday, but itâs apparently still in the middle of a sizable chunk of private property. And even detailed atlases donât indicate if existing roads allow access to it.
âItâs impossible to tell if some of those roads that go through it on the map are public thoroughfares, or if theyâre gated off,â he said.
For now, itâll have to be enough to have a little fun with a curiously misnamed place in the middle of nowhere in Wyoming.Â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





