Main Street Sheridan: A Walking Guide
    Things to Do

    Main Street Sheridan: A Walking Guide

    Historic storefronts, local boutiques, Western saloons, and hidden eateries — the complete guide.

    Dalton Goodyear · Dec 12, 2025 · 4 min read

    Sheridan's Main Street is one of the best small-city main streets in the American West — and most people driving through on I-90 don't even stop. That's fine with the locals. It means the independent shops, the century-old bars, and the genuinely good restaurants stay exactly what they are: real, unpolished, and yours to discover.

    Most people driving through Sheridan on I-90 don't stop. That's their loss — and quietly, for those of us who live here, something of a relief.

    King's Saddlery & Museum

    Start here. Don King's saddlery has been outfitting working cowboys since 1946, and today it's simultaneously a functioning saddle shop, a Western museum, and something close to a pilgrimage site. The museum portion in the back is free and holds one of the most remarkable collections of Western saddles, Native American beadwork, and ranch equipment in the country.

    Even if you're not buying a custom saddle (delivery is 6–12 months out, since they're still handmade on the premises), the free museum alone is worth an hour of your time. This is the real Wyoming — not a theme park version of it.

    The Mint Bar

    Open since 1907, the Mint Bar is a Wyoming institution. The bar top is original, the taxidermy on the walls has been there longer than most visitors have been alive, and the clientele on any given Tuesday ranges from working ranchers to visiting tech executives to people who just drove through and somehow never left.

    Order a Wyoming Whiskey on the rocks, find a stool, and give it twenty minutes. You'll understand why people who came through Sheridan "just for the weekend" ended up staying longer.

    Blacktooth Brewing Co.

    Wyoming's best craft brewery is right on Main Street, and the patio facing the Bighorns is one of the best places to sit in the entire state on a clear summer afternoon. The Saddle Bronc Brown is the flagship. The Wagon Box Wheat and Bomber Mountain Amber are equally reliable.

    Get there before 5 PM during WYO Rodeo week if you want to sit — the place fills fast once the rodeo crowds hit downtown.

    Le Rêve

    For the finest dining on Main Street, Le Rêve sets the standard. Seasonal tasting menus composed with precision and intentionality, an intimate atmosphere, and a wine program that rewards exploration. This is where Sheridan celebrates — and where visitors realize this town's food scene has depth they didn't expect.

    Reservations are essential, especially on weekends and during WYO Rodeo week.

    WYO Theater

    The WYO Theater is a 1923 vaudeville house that was saved from demolition and fully restored by the community in the 1990s. Today it hosts live concerts, comedy, film screenings, and special events year-round. Check their calendar — nationally touring acts stop in Sheridan specifically because of the WYO's reputation as a great small venue.

    Sheridan Farmers Market

    Every Thursday from June through September, the Sheridan Farmers Market takes over a stretch of downtown with local produce, honey, baked goods, handmade crafts, and live music. It's a genuinely community event — not a tourist trap.

    Timing your Thursday around the market and then walking to Blacktooth for the afternoon is one of the better afternoon schedules you can arrange in Sheridan.

    Shopping: Over the Moon & Best Out West

    For browsing, the two standout shops on Main Street are Over the Moon (women's clothing, locally made jewelry, and home goods with a Western sensibility) and Best Out West Antiques (one of the better antique collections in the region).

    Suggested 4-Hour Itinerary

    • 10:00 AM — Coffee at a local café, then King's Saddlery & Museum (allow 45–60 min)
    • 11:15 AM — Browse Main Street shops heading north
    • 12:00 PM — Lunch at Wyoming Cattle & Creek or a local deli
    • 1:00 PM — Farmers Market if Thursday (June–September)
    • 2:00 PM — Blacktooth Brewing for an afternoon pint on the patio
    • 3:30 PM — Walk the WYO Theater block, check events calendar
    • 6:30 PM — Dinner at Le Rêve (reservation essential)
    • After dinner — The Mint Bar for a nightcap

    Stay Downtown — Walk to All of It

    The best Sheridan experience starts with staying downtown. Most of our properties are within walking distance of everything on this list.

    Browse All Stays

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Main Street Sheridan offers King's Saddlery & Museum (free), the Mint Bar (open since 1907), Blacktooth Brewing Co., Le Rêve (fine dining), the WYO Theater (live events since 1923), a Thursday Farmers Market (June–September), and independent shops like Over the Moon and Best Out West Antiques.

    Yes. King's Saddlery & Museum at 184 N Main Street in Sheridan is free to visit. The museum holds one of the most remarkable collections of Western saddles, Native American beadwork, and ranch equipment in the country. Allow at least 45–60 minutes.

    The Sheridan Farmers Market runs every Thursday from June through September in downtown Sheridan. It features local produce, honey, baked goods, handmade crafts, and live music.

    Le Rêve is widely considered the finest dining on Main Street — seasonal tasting menus and an intimate atmosphere. Frackelton's anchors the steakhouse tradition. Reservations recommended at both on weekends and essential during WYO Rodeo week. For casual dining, Blacktooth Brewing Co. offers excellent craft beer with a mountain-view patio.