Hi there, we've noticed you are using a computer with an outdated browser and/or operating system that does not allow for secure online shopping. Please call South Dakota Magazine at 800-456-5117 to place your order by phone or if you have any further questions. We apologize for the inconvenience.
- Heidi Marsh, Marketing Director
South Dakota Magazine, Yankton, SD
The Early Years of South Dakota Magazine
Jul 15, 2008
When South Dakota Magazine started in 1985, many of our photos were in black and white. Here is a sampling of some of our favorite photos from those early years.
-
We found this young lady picking buffaloberries on Terry Peak in 1985.
-
Clyde Ice traded two used cars for an airplane after World War I and helped to pioneer air travel in South Dakota. Thousands of people took their first plane ride with the barnstormer.
-
Arne Larson collected musical instruments as a teenager. Eventually, they filled his Brookings home. In 1973 he moved everything to Vermillion where the world-class
Shrine to Music Museum was established.
-
Ed Yost left the corporate world to attempt a record-setting trans-Atlantic balloon flight.
-
The largest Danish colony in the United States in the late 19th century was in Turner County, so it's no surprise that men still play Sevensil, a card game from the Old Country, on main street in Viborg.
-
In 1964 Curt Carter bought his uncle's gas station, south of Watertown on U.S. Highway 81, and hung a few guns on the wall to sell. They sold, so he hung a few more. The business boomed into one of the Midwest's biggest gun shops,
Kones Korner.
-
A South Dakota Magazine photographer arrived at Lawrence Brown's ranch near Buffalo in 1993 just as the well-known rural activist's grandsons Nathan, Joseph and Justin, were preparing to milk their goat, Eugenia Blue Flower.
-
When word that a big mining company was secretly exploring for uranium in Yankton County, a roomful of irate landowners met in Irene and demanded information.
-
South Dakota Magazine readers want to learn about interesting out-of-the-way places. An example is Frank Day's Bar at Dallas, east of Winner on Highway 18. Old West history, hamburgers, hats and boots create a rare ambiance.
-
King Ziegler liked old cars and collected them before they became collectibles. Eventually he started this
unique salvage yard near Scotland. Sheep kept the grass short.
-
George and Alice Stroppel's
hotel and hot bath business in Midland celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2000. The peacefulness of Midland is almost as restful as the 119-degree geothermal waters.
Favorite photos from South Dakota Magazine's early years.
Boaters from all over set sail at Lewis & Clark Lake.
Krojes (folk costumes of Czechoslovakia), kolaches, polkas and pivo were everywhere at Tabor's 60th Czech ...
A Taste of Life on the Northern Plains.
Mount Moriah houses about 3,600 graves, including some colorful old West characters.
Comments