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South Dakota Resolutions

Editor Katie Hunhoff and other South Dakota Magazine staffers share resolutions to explore the state in 2021.

We have a New Year’s tradition at South Dakota Magazine to make resolutions on traveling South Dakota. As you can imagine, our staff knows the state pretty well. The resolutions are a fun way to challenge ourselves to try new places and activities.

This year the resolutions are different because of the pandemic; we are all looking for travel opportunities that can be accomplished with safety and health in mind. Maybe our resolutions will give you some ideas.

Hannah Schaefer, our photography and editorial assistant, plans on reading books she collected at the South Dakota Book Festival. On her list is Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (the South Dakota Humanities Council’s One Book South Dakota for 2020), Murder on the Red River and Girl Gone Missing by Marcie Rendon and According to Kate by Chris Enss. (On a side note, our managing editor put together a collection of South Dakota books that are must reads. You’ll find his suggestions in our Nov/Dec 2020).

Departments Editor Laura Johnson Andrews has a couple of day trips planned.”I have been holed up for most of 2020 due to COVID concerns, so at this point, a trip to Toby’s Lounge in Meckling would be a nearly unbearable thrill,” she says. Toby’s is about a 10-minute drive east of Yankton and is known for delicious broasted chicken. Laura also wants to venture a little further to the town of Colome.”I’d love a tour of the Colome area with our food columnist, Fran Hill. I haven’t been there since the South Dakota Outhouse Museum moved to town, so I feel like I’m overdue.”

John Andrews, our managing editor, is planning a trip around some magazine stories he wants to write.”I’m writing a story on Peter Norbeck to coincide with the holiday in his honor, which I don’t think many South Dakotans know about. I think the story of how his house ended up in Geddes and that small town’s own resolve to save it is pretty inspiring.”

Bernie Hunhoff, our editor at large, also wants to visit an historic place.”In all my travels of South Dakota, I have never visited the site of Sitting Bull’s death along the Grand River in Corson County. I hope to get there in 2021. By about any standard, he must rank as the greatest and most influential person to have lived in our region over the last 200 years.”

My resolution is to hike a new peak every time I visit the Black Hills, starting with Black Elk Peak, which I am ashamed to say I have never climbed. But I think all of us probably have a similar destination that we never took the time to experience. That’s part of why we love printing the magazine — to remind people what we have in our own backyard and spark the desire to start exploring.

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The Show Goes On

Deadwood’s outlaw history is key to its draw as a tourist destination. Street performances by the local acting troupe Deadwood Alive — reenacting historic scenes featuring characters like Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane — draw crowds and stoke the Deadwood mystique.

This year, the COVID-19 pandemic slowed the start of Deadwood’s tourist season, but business is picking up.

Statistics tallied by the Deadwood Chamber of Commerce show May hotel occupancies were down 19 percent, and June’s down nearly 18 percent, though occupancy levels fared better than the national average. According to numbers compiled by the South Dakota Commission on Gaming, gambling revenues were down throughout the spring, but rebounded in June, with Deadwood casinos actually improving on last June’s take by 13.75 percent, led by a brisk slot machine business.

As the sound of pulled slot levers get louder, crowds have grown for Deadwood Alive’s street performances.

Andy Mosher is the executive director of Deadwood Alive. He also plays several roles, including that of Con Stapleton, the first and only town marshall of Deadwood, and John Swift, the court clerk at The Trial of Jack McCall.

This year, Deadwood Alive cancelled its weekend spring season. The summer season started Memorial Day weekend with the troupe, per usual, presenting several outdoor performances at daily scheduled times.

The Trial of Jack McCall, a Deadwood theatrical tradition since the 1920s, is still presented indoors, nowadays to a smaller audience. Masks are recommended though not enforced.

“We started out to a very small crowd,” Mosher says. “Our attendance has increased as the summer has progressed. Outside our shows are practically not affected. It’s built slowly up through the summer and now it’s kind of normal for what it would be. Our indoor show is still quite reduced and probably down about 30 percent for the year.”

The reduced numbers at the indoor show and loss of the spring season have markedly decreased revenues, but they’ve managed to stay fully staffed.

“We were lucky enough to attain a little bit of funding through government subsidies and so forth to make up some of the money that we’re losing,” Mosher says.

Deadwood Alive’s outdoor performances are popular but don’t pay the bills.

“The Trial of Jack McCall of course, is [at] an indoor venue, so people are a little more hesitant to attend. That’s the only thing that we charge money for is that show. So it is going to affect our revenues substantially this year.”

The players recently performed at the (outdoor) Days of ’76 Rodeo, which Mosher says was a success.

“It was huge. I was actually kind of surprised at how many people did attend and sit right in the bleachers nearby each other. Of course, it is outdoors and that does help quite a bit.”

Michael Zimny is a content producer for South Dakota Public Broadcasting and is based in Rapid City. He blogs for SDPB and contributes columns to the South Dakota Magazine website.

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Traveling with a Classic Guidebook

An arch that once spanned Highway 12 at Ipswich was moved to facilitate the road’s expansion in 1973. It now stands in a nearby park. Photo by Chad Coppess/S.D. Tourism.

Perhaps the oldest book in my office is a maroon hardcover copy of the South Dakota Guide. Published in 1938, the book was a project of the Depression-era Works Progress Administration. Out-of-work writers were hired to explore the 48 states and compile a travel book for each one, pointing out interesting places along the main-travelled routes.

In the summer of 2018, in honor of the book’s 80th anniversary, we decided to see what remained of the sites chronicled in the original guidebook. Some no longer exist, but we discovered several points of interest that drew the attention of the travel writers of 1938. In this summer of social distancing, perhaps a drive with the South Dakota Guide as a companion might be in order. Original copies of the book are hard to find, but the South Dakota Historical Society Press published a new version in 2005.

Here are a few examples of entries as they appeared in the original guide, along with our present-day observations.

Memorial Hall, Pierre

  • 1938: Memorial Hall is dedicated to South Dakota soldiers and sailors who lost their lives in the World War and houses the State Historical Society, Department of History and State Museum. Constructed of Hot Springs, S.Dak., sandstone, the building is stately and of classic design.
  • 2020: Memorial Hall still stands, though the historical society has moved to the Cultural Heritage Center. The building is now home to the state military and veterans affairs departments.

Graceland Cemetery, Mitchell

  • 1938: Left of the road is the Israel Greene Monument, a large red stone marker bearing the coat of arms of the Greene family — Nathaniel Greene of Revolutionary War fame and Israel Greene who captured John Brown at Harpers’ Ferry in 1859 while a lieutenant under Gen. Robert E. Lee. When the Civil War was over, Israel Greene came to Mitchell as a surveyor, living there the rest of his life.
  • 2020: The cemetery is obviously larger, but it’s easy to find the Greene memorial in Old Part Block II-A.

Highway Arch, Ipswich

  • 1938: The promotion of the Yellowstone Trail from”Plymouth Rock to Puget Sound” was begun at Ipswich by Joseph W. Parmley. A World War Memorial Arch spans the highway, bearing the name of the Yellowstone Trail and its founder.
  • 2020: The arch had to be removed when Highway 12 was expanded in 1973. You’ll find it today in a nearby park.

Main Street, Aberdeen

  • 1938: The site of the drug store in Main Traveled Roads by Hamlin Garland is at the corner of Main St. and First Ave. SE, across from the Alonzo Ward Hotel.
  • 2020: The building across from the Ward Hotel, a downtown landmark since its construction in 1928, is now a law office. Garland homesteaded in Brown County with his parents before becoming a noted novelist.

The Jump-off, Harding County

  • 1938: The Jump-Off is really a fault in earth’s surface extending N. and S. for many miles, the country is much like the Badlands on a smaller scale. It was in the heart of the Jump-Off that Tipperary, South Dakota’s most famous bucking horse, lived his entire life on the ranch of his owner, Charlie Wilson.
  • 2020: Tipperary is still famous in rodeo circles. A life-size bronze of the horse, sculpted by Tony Chytka, stands in Centennial Park in Buffalo.

Washington High School, Sioux Falls

  • 1938: Between Main and Dakota Aves., and 11th and 12th Sts., known as the”million dollar high school,” was constructed of native pink quartzite stone, with the north wing trim and column portico of a black quartzite so rare that it has been occasionally dismantled and exhibited at expositions.
  • 2020: The old Washington High School is now the Washington Pavilion. The black stone is actually Corson diabase, a billion-year-old molten rock that flowed into fractures in the pink quartzite and was mined at Lien Park in northeast Sioux Falls.
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The Magic of Autumn in South Dakota

Ride along the Herman & Milwaukee Railroad in Madison’s Prairie Village and then find your favorite pumpkin. Photo by Historic Prairie Village.

Autumn in South Dakota is magical for me. Our state comes alive with gatherings that bring out the best we have to offer — unique foods and events (see”Dinner with a Ghost” below) and community spirit.

Apple pickings, pumpkin carvings, barn dances, Oktoberfest feasts, scarecrow contests and lots of other parties are always planned. Each and every one takes a lot of work. I know that firsthand, because our 4-H club in Yankton County once organized a haunted house as a fundraiser.

We labored for weeks on super-sized spider webs, barnwood coffins, graveyard stones and a witch’s brew of body parts made with spaghetti, Jell-O and other gooey stuff from the refrigerator. Jason chased people with his chain saw; every time he started the engine the dads double-checked it to be sure there was no chain. Young children performed as spooks –a creepy bonus we hadn’t anticipated.

Hard work is weirdly part of the fun with South Dakota events, especially when cool weather curtails our outdoor entertainment.

We feature favorite events in every issue of the magazine and our September/October calendar is always one of the fullest, so check it out. Here is just a sampling of this year’s autumn calendar.

  • Sept. 13-14: Dinner with a Ghost, Mitchell. Gourmet meal and paranormal investigation. Corn Palace. Call (503) 569-4753.
  • Sept 25: Haunted Deadwood. A presentation on subjects and theories relating to paranormal investigations. Visit DeadwoodHistory.com to reserve space for a psychic reading or to be a part of a paranormal investigation.
  • Sept 28: Great Downtown Pumpkin Festival, Rapid City. Beware of flying pumpkins! The competitive Pumpkin Chuckin’ event is one of the highlights of this 11th annual gathering. There is also a pumpkin weigh-off, pub crawl and vendors. Call (605) 716-7979.
  • Sept 28: Living History Fall Festival, Groton. Demonstrations, reenactments, food, kids’ spelling bee, pumpkin decorating and more. Granary Rural Cultural Center. Call (605) 626-7117.
  • Oct. 4-5: Pumpkin Fest and Lighted Night Parade, Webster. Baking contest, wagon rides, kids’ activities, crafts and food. Free hot chocolate during the parade. Call (605) 345-4668 for more information.
  • Oct 5: Pumpkin Train, Madison. Visiting the pumpkin patch is a common family tradition. Madison adds a picturesque railroad experience. The Pumpkin Train at Prairie Village takes guests to the pumpkin patch, where children 12 and under can pick their own. Call (605) 256-3644 for more information.

Let us know if you attend these events — we would love to see any photos you post on social media. Use #sodakmag so we can find them.

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Backroad Tripping

“It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.” — JRR Tolkien

Unlike Bilbo in Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Ring, I have always loved a good old-fashioned road trip. I grew up on a small dairy operation and the daily chores kept us homebound for much of that time. Anytime a road trip presented itself, it was a chance to see the outside world and other country sides. To this day, I’m perfectly happy driving through”new to me” country, taking in the sights on any given vacation.

As I’ve grown older, I’ve noticed that the love of the road is not unique to me. Not by a long shot. Popular music, from country to rock, all have a good share of songs praising and lamenting life on the road. South Dakota musician Jami Lynn penned a song inspired by her favorite stretch of Dakota road along Highway 34 in the Bridger area called”Cheyenne River Bottoms.” A favorite line from the tune is”Seems Highway 34 could drive me straight into the afterlife.” I’ve been on roads like that. Sometimes it’s the scenery, sometimes it’s the sky — and when it’s both, that is when the view outside the windshield can enter into the mystical.

And now it is road trip season again. Long light days, warm weather, new life and simple wanderlust has taken me all over South Dakota this spring and summer. I’ve become a big fan of backroads and two-lane highways. I’ve especially grown fond of roads with their own names. Back in my old stomping grounds of Ziebach County, there is a road called Leedom Pike that takes you right up to and through the Moreau River and out to Thunder Butte road. This may always be my favorite passage in the state, although I’d not recommend going after a good rain because the gravel eventually turns to slick gumbo in the river hills. I know this from experience. Thank goodness for prairie grass in the ditch or I may have never returned from that trip.

Other roads I’ve come to know and love include the Bixby Road in Perkins County, the JB Pass in Harding County, Jim River Road in Yankton County and the Bad River Road going southwest out of Fort Pierre. I recently drove by Hidden Timber Road in Todd County and nearly stopped just to see what lay yonder over the hill. Maybe next time. Maybe you have a favorite scenic byway that you love. If so, drop a line in the comments and hopefully someday I’ll take a drive in that general direction. In the meantime, here is a verse from Bilbo’s road song to celebrate our love of the road.

“The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot say.” — JRR Tolkien

Christian Begeman grew up in Isabel and now lives in Sioux Falls. When he’s not working at Midco he is often on the road photographing South Dakota’s prettiest spots. Follow Begeman on his blog.

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A Bunch of Bull

The most prominent feature in downtown Miller is a pair of bull sculptures — a Hereford and an Angus — mounted several feet above street-level at the town’s central four-way stop.

If you’re passing through, you might wonder: what’s their story?

“The bulls were put up to recognize ranching efforts in Hand County, where we raised mostly Hereford and Angus cattle,” says Tammy Caffee, the Executive Director of On Hand Development Corporation — a non-profit dedicated to expanding economic opportunity in the Miller area — and lifetime Miller resident.

In the late 1950s, a group of local cattlemen — including brothers Ted and Clayton Jennings, who won many honors for their Angus breeds, as well as Paul Robinson and Art Magness — got together and raised a monument to every beef eater’s favorite Scottish import. Not to be outdone, a local Hereford rancher placed a monument to his own breed across the street. Except for one brief hiatus, the bulls have stood at their stations ever since.

“There was a short period of time when they were taken down,” Caffee says.”People were very upset about that. [The bulls] are our icons here in Miller. The reason they’re important to us is because the ranching industry was important to us. Over the years now, many ranchers have turned to just farming. But the bulls are very dear to us.”

Michael Zimny is the social media engagement specialist for South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion. He blogs for SDPB and contributes arts columns to the South Dakota Magazine website.

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Local Experts’ Dining Tips

Our readers seem to think that all of us at South Dakota Magazine are experts on every nook and cranny of our state. The truth is, we’re not. But we have friends and readers in every town and city, so we know who to ask about the best place to eat, hike, sightsee or learn about a place’s culture and history.

There’s nothing like a local’s perspective. That’s why we started a special department in every issue that we call”Seven Things I Love About South Dakota.” We ask South Dakotans to share some of their favorite haunts, and we’re always surprised at their suggestions. (See, I told you we aren’t experts!)

Our featured South Dakotans always have a favorite restaurant. Usually it is a little-known mom-and-pop place with a menu special that keeps people coming back. Here are a few favorites that I’m anxious to visit in our 2019 travels.

Veteran journalist Kevin Woster recalled good times at Al’s Oasis when he shared his favorite things about South Dakota.”Whatever leads up to the strawberry pie at Al’s Oasis in Oacoma is good. But it’s the faces and the memories that really fill me up. Al is gone, but I can see him at a table in his red cardigan, chatting with my now-departed mom as she adds half & half to make her coffee golden brown.” Woster grew up on a Lyman County farm and spent several years as a reporter for our state’s largest newspapers.

Architect Tom Hurlbert told us in 2017 about his favorite ice cream stop.”I worked for the Twist Cone in Aberdeen in eighth grade. I didn’t work at the main store, but instead they relegated me to Noah’s Ark, the old concessions building at Storybook Land. I put away about 6 feet of footlongs a week and ate my weight in ice cream. I still enjoy an Italian ice from the Twist Cone, but I lay off the footlongs now.” Hurlbert, co-owner and founder of CO-OP Architecture, lives in Sioux Falls now but he enjoys Twist Cone on summer visits back to Aberdeen.

Black Hills State University history instructor Kelly Kirk grew up in North Dakota, but fell in love with the Black Hills during family vacations. She likes to take friends to breakfast at Cheyenne Crossing in Spearfish Canyon.”The pancakes are fluffy, the skillets are filling and delicious, and the coffee continuously flows. And if you are going to truly enjoy the experience, a side of the frybread or wojapi is a must.”

Ashley Hanson grew up on a farm along Ponca Creek and returned home after attending technical school in Rapid City. She recommended a stop at Stella’s in Burke.”Stella’s has a great, juicy sirloin steak and delicious fried pickles with a little kick. There’s also a patio where live bands play throughout the summer.”

Darla Drew Lerdal, of the Black Hills Playhouse, thinks breakfast at Talley’s Silver Spoon in downtown Rapid City is the best — especially the eggs benedict with salmon.

Sean Dempsey of Dempsey’s Brewery in Watertown is an international pizza competitor, so you may be especially interested in his favorite dining spot. It’s Mama’s Ladas in Sioux Falls.”I love the beautiful simplicity,” he says,”a few choices of enchiladas, red or white sangria and seating for 15 to 25 people.”

We could go on forever, but this should be enough to tempt your palate and your sense of curiosity as you plan your road trips for the new year ahead.

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Resolutions of Adventure for 2018

Have you already broken your New Year’s resolution? If so, don’t feel badly.

Forty percent of Americans make them every January, but only an estimated 8 percent stick to them, according to a study by the University of Scranton. Most people abandon their good intentions by Groundhog’s Day.

Maybe we should all make happier resolutions. Who needs to walk more miles on a treadmill or eat fewer sweets? In that spirit, I asked some of the people who contribute stories to our magazine to make resolutions on where they’d like to travel in the New Year. They came up with a list of places that would make a sweet bucket list for any South Dakotan.

Here’s where you might find our writers this summer. And knowing them all like I do, I also wouldn’t be surprised to see them at the local cafe enjoying a slice of homemade pie with ice cream.


Bernie Hunhoff

South Dakota Magazine editor-at-large

I resolve to get up to Harding County in 2018. It’s been a while since I’ve been there, and it’s one of my favorite places in the world — very pristine and original landscapes, and of course salt-of-the-earth people with no shortage of stories. The only reason we don’t get there more often is the distance — from Yankton, I think you can drive to Denver or Chicago faster than you can drive to Camp Crook. But personally I’d rather explore Camp Crook.

Linda Hasselstrom

Hermosa rancher and author of 16 books, most recently Gathering from the Grassland: A Plains Journal

1. Poet’s Table: a return trip; 2. Lame Johnny Cave; 3. Community Cave; 4. Ghost town of Creston; 5. Scored Rock Petroglyphs, on private land at an undisclosed location

Paul Higbee

Spearfish writer, and author of South Dakota’s Cowboy Governor Tom Berry

There are three things in the southeast corner of the state I have never done, and I plan to do them all in a single day next fall: visit Burbank, eat at Whimps, and watch a football game in the Dakota Dome.

Lance Nixon

Freelance writer, Pierre

The one place my family and I are definitely making plans to visit in 2018 (again) is the Fort Pierre National Grassland as the spring courtship rituals of the greater prairie chicken and sharp-tailed grouse are taking place. The birds will be out dancing on their traditional grounds, or leks, at the crack of dawn in about April and May. The U.S. Forest Service, which manages the national grassland, allows people to reserve a blind free of charge by simply calling ahead. For me the most stunning thing is the sound the prairie chickens make — like listening to musicians playing woodwind instruments from another world. However, my wife and children insist the sharp-tailed grouse are better dancers.

Laura Andrews

South Dakota Magazine writer and circulation director

I’m decades behind on my South Dakota travel — I was in my 30s before I made it to Utica, over on the wrong side of Yankton County — and am itching to get caught up a bit in 2018. Ipswich is calling my name, as is Lemmon’s famed Petrified Wood Park. I’d also like to find out what goes on in Mud Butte, and I hear they serve a mean Bloody Mary in Hudson. But more familiar places exert their own pull. You can’t beat a trip to the Colome-Carlock-Gregory-Dallas area, especially when you’ve got local food blogger Fran Hill as your guide, and ever since I drove down into Wessington Springs on my way home from Pierre one rainy, blustery spring day, I have wanted to return to those Jerauld County hills. Perhaps this will be the year.

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Why”Johnson Siding?”

Johnson Siding lies just west of Rapid City along Highway 44.

Have you ever driven west from Rapid City on Highway 44 and thought,”Gee, I wish there was a remote vinyl siding outlet around while I’m out here exploring the beautiful Black Hills?” Then you round a corner and there’s Johnson Siding?

If you did, you soon realized that Johnson Siding is the name of a town, not an out-of-the way home improvement center. Hopefully you weren’t too disappointed. So, why “Johnson Siding?”

The answer — like the answer to so many town etymologies — has to do with the railroad, and a sawmill built on Rapid Creek in the 1890s by a Swedish immigrant named John Johnson. You might have guessed correctly that Mr. Johnson is the namesake of the Johnson in “Johnson Siding.”

A “siding” in railroad lingo is a short section of track where trains can pull off to load or unload, and allow others to pass. In 1906, the last spike was driven on the Crouch Line — the rail spur that conveyed passengers and freight through the heart of the Black Hills from Rapid City to Mystic until 1948. The Johnson mill provided much of the lumber used in constructing the many bridges and trestles the Crouch needed to cross the rocky terrain. The siding also allowed the Johnson mill to fulfill lumber orders from Rapid City or anywhere else on the line. Over time, “Johnson Siding” evolved from an informal to a formal town name.

The Big Bend Powerhouse in 1920.

The Johnson family provided lumber to the Dakota Power Company when it bought the flume built by the Dakota-Placerville Mining Company — delivering water from Pactola to the Placerville mine — and extended it to the Big Bend Powerhouse, near Thunderhead Falls.

The line dropped more than 300 feet along its course to generate enough pressure to turn the turbines of a generator that helped supply power to Rapid City. The Flume Trail is built along the old flume bed. Hikers can still see remnants of the flume, and the adjacent catwalk used by maintenance workers, along the trail.

Johnson Siding isn’t the only town with “siding” in the name. Tie Siding, Wyoming is so named because in the late nineteenth century “tie hacks” — lumberjacks who felled trees and hewed them into vast numbers of ties for western railroad expansion — would float logs harvested in the Colorado Rockies down the Cache la Poudre River to Laporte, where they were hauled in ox-drawn wagons to the siding.

Tie hacks felled trees through summer and winter, stripping and hewing them with a broadax. Their river shipments sometimes created enormous logjams that had to be cleared with dynamite.

The Tie Hack Memorial near Dubois, Wyoming commemorates the efforts of the tie hacks. There are no worker-hero monuments in either Johnson or Tie Siding. Johnson Siding has a church, gas station, community center and bar. Tie Siding has an antique/fireworks store and a post office.

Building railways from sea-to-sea was temporary work, so there may have been more “Sidings” that have faded into unmapped memories with a faint scent of sawdust and steel.

Michael Zimny is the social media engagement specialist for South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion. He blogs for SDPB and contributes arts columns to the South Dakota Magazine website.

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Hot Water and Old Bones

Last summer our family spent an afternoon at Evans Plunge in Hot Springs. Its warm-water pools have attracted people for decades, but it was the first time we had ever been there. I wasn’t prepared for the rocky bottom in the main pool, but the kids enjoyed the water slides, games and watching other swimmers try to cross the width of the pool Tarzan-style by swinging from ring to ring (neither of them were tall enough to try on their own).

Hot Springs is the seat of Fall River County, which encompasses 1,749 square miles in the far southwestern corner of South Dakota. As is the case with much of arid West River, rain is tough to come by. The county averages 20 inches or less of rain a year, which is why it seems so remarkable that water played such a tremendous impact on life in that part of the state.

We can say it began 26,000 years ago, when an enormous sinkhole formed on what would eventually become the southern edge of Hot Springs. The prehistoric creatures that roamed the continent — mammoths, giant short-faced bears, camels — ventured to the oasis to drink, only to discover its banks were too slippery to ascend. They died and were buried there, lost for millennia.

Visitors file past mammoth bones that lay buried for thousands of years. Photo by Chad Coppess/S.D. Tourism.

Then in 1974, Philip and Elenora Anderson began to develop that land for a housing project. Dirt work stopped immediately when a bulldozer unearthed a huge tusk. The Andersons donated the land to a nonprofit organization that built an enclosure over the site. Dr. Larry Agenbroad of Chadron State University in Nebraska oversaw the initial paleontological work there and stayed until his death in 2014. Today, visitors can stroll through the 23,000-square-foot Mammoth Site on walkways that provide views of volunteers working to expose fossils. The most recent count says that scientists and volunteers have discovered 61 mammoths, plus fossils from other land and sea creatures.

Fred Evans capitalized on water when he arrived in the Black Hills in about 1875 and heard about Minnekahta, or the warm water springs where Native Americans sought healing. The springs that eventually became Evans Plunge had a relatively inauspicious beginning. One early settler who owned the land on which the main spring is found reportedly sold it for a horse valued at $35. Evans built a grand sandstone hotel and enclosed the spring in 1890. He advertised its mineral waters, flowing from the earth at a steady 87 degrees, as a cure-all.

Hot Springs’ Freedom Trail follows the Fall River through town.

People came from throughout the country to test the springs’ medicinal qualities. The wife of a Nebraska senator visited and returned home feeling like a new woman.”Mrs. Paddock has fully recovered after many years of suffering, a result wholly due to the mineral properties of the Hot Springs water,” reported the Hot Springs Star. I don’t recall feeling particularly rejuvenated after our visit last summer, but the fun we had surely did something for our spirits.

If water could make a Fall River County town, it could also break it. A few years ago, a freelance photographer submitted a batch of photos he’d taken on a trip through Ardmore in the far southern reaches of the county. He thought at the time that maybe a couple of people still lived there, but it seems to be considered a ghost town today. Old cars, buildings and even the town’s water tower still stand, but there’s no life to be seen. Ardmore sprang up as a railroad town in 1889, but water was scarce. Hat Creek proved an unreliable source. A train car brought the last load of water into town more than 40 years ago. Still, Ardmore holds a special place for the people who grew up there. They still comment on the photo gallery we created from that batch of photos, almost four years after we originally posted it.

Old cars and a water tower are among the remains of Ardmore. Photo by Joel Schwader.

Fall River County is also the source of some historical oddities. The community of Igloo was created in the early 1940s when the U.S. Department of Defense located the Black Hills Ordnance Depot in rural Fall River County. Hundreds of dome-shaped structures resembling igloos began to rise across the prairie. Thousands of people lived at Igloo until the government cut the depot’s funding in 1967. Look closely when you pass on Highway 471; the strange ruins are still visible.

The canyons around Edgemont are home to mysterious petroglyphs that are thousands of years old. Several years ago, I talked to John Koller, who grew up on a 2.500-acre ranch along the Cheyenne River east of Edgemont.”I was told they were there, but as a kid out here, you work,” he said.”So when you pick up a rock and throw it at a cow to get it out of a box canyon, you don’t have time to stop and look at these wonderful finds. I crawled around these petroglyphs all the time, but didn’t pay attention.”

Later in life he began to appreciate the ancient art that surrounded him. He estimated one drawing to be at least 8,000 years old, while others were between 2,500 and 3,000 years old.

Hundreds of dome-shaped structures were constructed when the Black Hills Ordnance Depot located in rural Fall River County in the 1940s.

Perhaps the most interesting oddity I discovered while poking around Fall River County is a map that Hot Springs businessman Orlando Ferguson used to support his theory that the earth was square and stationary. Ferguson had the map printed in 1893. It resembles a bundt cake pan turned upside down. The continents and oceans lie around an indented ring, while the North Pole is raised in the center. The sun and moon are attached to an actual pole rising from that point.

His astronomical principles were based on a very literal interpretation of the Bible, beginning with the reference to angels visiting the four corners of the earth. From there, he developed his square and stationary idea. He claimed the sun was 30 miles in diameter and just 3,000 miles from earth. His reasoning? If you stand at the equator on March 21, when the sun is directly overhead, then the distance you can walk north or south without casting a shadow is equal to the diameter of the sun.

He also shunned the idea of gravity. Instead he thought atmospheric pressure held people down and pushed the oceans up the sides of his indented map. Stop by the Pioneer Museum and take a look at the map and a pamphlet he had printed. Chances are you won’t buy what Ferguson was selling, but there are plenty of other natural and historical wonders to be found in Fall River County.

Editor’s Note: This is the 34th installment in an ongoing series featuring South Dakota’s 66 counties. Click here for previous articles.