K.C. Hillâs employees tell her all the time that there are ghosts in Pinedaleâs World Famous Corral Bar late at night, but she doesnât feel them.Â
The only ghosts for her are the memories.
âI have two nieces and a nephew and then I have two sons â my oldest will be 22 in May â and he learned to walk in that bar,â she told Cowboy State Daily. âAnd I tell people that all the time. The craziest thing was, last year he sat at that bar for the first time and had a drink.â
It was a full-circle moment for Hill, and bittersweet as well.
Hill and her family have decided itâs time to relinquish their stewardship of the Pinedale favorite, whose name has included âWorld Famousâ since the 1970s, even when it couldnât possibly yet be world famous. The bar has been listed for sale with Rocky Mountain Realty for $1.495 million.Â
âMy parents put a lot of blood, sweat and tears into that place,â Hill told Cowboy State Daily. âAnd itâs bittersweet to see it go. I just hope that someone will enjoy it as much as I and my parents did, because they really did. They bonded as a couple in that bar.â
Hillâs parents were married for 50 years before her mom Pat Bozner died, and 25 of those were at the bar.
âPeople say that they donât want to own a business with their spouse because theyâd kill each other,â Hill said. âBut I just watched my parents blossom as a couple.
âThey became so close because they were troubleshooting together all the time. They werenât against each other. They were partnering together on something, and they respected each other more as the years went on.â
Hillâs father Joe Bozner has been ill more recently, and thatâs part of whatâs prompted the decision to sell the bar.
âItâs just time,â Hill said. âItâs time for someone else.â
A Life-Changing Vacation Trip
Hillâs parents bought the bar in 2000 during a weekend vacation trip to Pinedale.
âMy parents owned a business in Rock Springs, a concrete business, but my grandparents and my dad built a cabin in Pinedale,â Hill recalled. âThey started it, like, in 1977, and so weâve been frequent flyers to Pinedale, just traveling on the weekends ever since I was born.â
The Corral was a favorite stop during their Pinedale runs, because it not only had delicious pizzas and sandwiches to go with a wide selection of beverages, but everything was always affordable.Â
One day, Joe saw a for-sale sign in the window of his favorite bar and decided to talk to the owner about buying it. He had noticed how, over the years, it was becoming quite run down.
âSo, my parents pulled the trigger, and they spent probably six months cleaning it up and getting it functioning,â Hill said. âThe coolers didnât work, and they dumped a lot of money into it.â
So much money it had the couple âsweating bulletsâ at first, Hill said, because they werenât sure they could make it work.
âThey opened in October, and it was packed the whole weekend,â Hill said. âPacked from front to back.â
But Hillâs mom got into an altercation with one of the patrons at closing time. It was almost a deal-breaker.
âShe went home and cried and told my dad, âI canât do this,ââ Hill recalled. âHe was like, âOh well, you know thatâs going to happen. Weâre going to get through this.ââ
And they did.
Not only that, but they added on to the place, buying the building next door so theyâd have another whole dance floor, and closing the restaurant so they could focus on the faster, more economic pizza, sandwiches and freezer-to-fryer bar food their establishment is now well-known for.Â
The pizza recipes, though, are still the same ones the restaurant had when Hillâs parents bought the place. That and the recipes for other bar favorites will go with the bar.

Tree Stump Bar Stools Are Staying
The bar was built sometime in the 1940s, Hill said. She has a photograph of it thatâs dated 1946, but isnât sure when it was exactly built.
She does know the bar has weathered all kinds of economic storms, from the oil and gas bust in the early 2000s to the COVID-19 Pandemic in 2020.Â
Hill and her family have added many new amenities over the years, from a Crown shot machine to new bar stools. They did keep many of the old artifacts in place, though, like their tree stumps, which used to serve as the only barstools.
Some of the artifacts, like the sign with a picture of a woman that says, âNo matter how good she looks, some guyâs tired of her shit,â will be going with Hill.Â
But those locally famous tree stump barstools and many other artifacts will be staying.Â
âI refused to get rid of (the tree stumps),â Hill said. âWe have scattered them throughout the bar at our gaming machines and stuff. People love that we have logs for bar stools, and I remember them from when I was a kid.â
The Case Of The Disappearing Drinks
The familyâs memories of the Corral Bar predate its 2000 purchase, and the bar will always have a soft spot in Hill and her familyâs hearts.Â
âMy mom grew up in Big Piney, and my aunt would tell us that they used to sneak into the Corral when she was in high school, and there were windows on the alley side of the bar,â Hill said. âAnd they used to take those peopleâs drinks and drink them, because they would set them down to go dancing.â
Thatâs one of many things blamed on ghosts over the years, but Hill said she thinks her familyâs bar is just an old building that makes old building sounds late at night â sounds that are much more audible when one is alone at the bar, late at night.
After Pat died, some of the heart for the business went out of the family.
My dad didnât do the business side of the bar,â Hill said. âMy mom had always done that. So he was really struggling with that.â
Hill quit her job to help him at the bar in 2021, even though owning a bar had never been a particular dream of hers.
âMy dad is 77 years old,â Hill said. âAnd we donât live up there permanently. I still have kids in school and stuff like that. So, itâs just one of those things where we think itâs time for a fresh face.â
The community, Hill added, has been great.Â
âMy dad stopped coming up to Pinedale in December because he had fallen, and it wasnât but a few weeks and pretty soon everybody started asking about him. âWhereâs Joe?â,â Hill said. âAnd people have sent cards, and they come find me if Iâm up there and ask about him. Thatâs just how good of a community they are.â
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Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.




