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Wall Drug Wanderlust

I can’t remember ever having a Wall Drug doughnut. As a kid, we often stopped at this iconic West River tourist destination on our trips to the Black Hills. I very well could have sampled a doughnut along with my cup of free ice water. However, I was a child with finicky eating habits, and food didn’t hit my radar. I was probably entranced with some brightly colored T-shirt or flashy trinket that my parents refused to purchase for me. I have had my picture taken with a concrete saloon girl, but don’t remember any doughnuts.

As an adult, it has been several years since I have made a trip across the Badlands and passed Wall Drug. When I do venture west, my schedule is usually rushed and not doughnut-stop friendly. I need to amend this. How can I consider myself a connoisseur of South Dakota foods without having a few Wall Drug doughnuts under my belt?

Until I get a chance to head west on a doughnut quest, I am going to have to make doughnuts in my own kitchen. The Wall Drug cake doughnuts are fried and served either plain or frosted with chocolate, maple or vanilla glaze. At home, I am not going to compete with these classics. Baked Apple Cider Doughnuts rolled in cinnamon sugar are as simple as baking muffins. Autumn is the perfect time to lean into apple cider as an ingredient, and warm spices are perfectly cozy for a crisp fall day. Let’s just hope I don’t get too cozy and forget my wanderlust for the Wall Drug doughnut.


Apple Cider Doughnuts are a fine substitute for Wall Drug’s famous cake doughnuts.

Baked Apple Cider Doughnuts

(Adapted from Food Network)

For doughnuts:

1 1/2 cups flour

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

1/3 cup apple cider

1/4 cup buttermilk

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature

1/2 cup brown sugar

1/2 cup granulated sugar

2 large eggs

For dipping:

1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted

1 cup granulated sugar mixed with 1 teaspoon cinnamon

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Coat doughnut pans with nonstick baking spray. (I use 2 six-cavity doughnut pans and bake my doughnuts like muffins, but some recommend 4 pans and after filling the first 2 pans, clamping the other 2 empty pans over the batter to form a mold for the doughnuts.)

Combine the flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg.

In a liquid measuring cup, combine the cider, buttermilk and vanilla.

With a stand mixer, beat butter, brown sugar and granulated sugar. Mix on high until light and fluffy. (Walk away and make a cup of coffee here. Let that butter and sugar cream to be REALLY fluffy.)

Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing well between each addition. Add one-third of the flour mixture and then half of the cider mixture. Continue alternating between the two until the batter is just combined. Remove bowl from the stand mixer and give the batter a few folds with a rubber spatula to make sure the ingredients are well distributed.

Transfer the batter to a piping bag or a large zip-close bag with a corner snipped off (don’t snip the end until AFTER the bag is filled with batter), and pipe into two of the doughnut pans. Bake 15 to 20 minutes. The cake should spring back when gently touched.

Turn the doughnuts out onto a cooling rack; immediately brush with melted butter, then dip in the cinnamon sugar. (I have skipped the melted butter and just immediately rolled the warm doughnuts in cinnamon sugar with great success.) Yield: 1 dozen doughnuts.

Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and their three dogs ranch near Colome.

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Pennington Revisited

Ten years ago, Jerry Wilson, the former managing editor of South Dakota Magazine, wrote an article about the incredible geographic diversity found in Pennington County. Its western edge begins in the heart of the Black Hills. As you travel east, the second largest city in South Dakota — Rapid City — sprawls along the eastern foothills. The landscape gradually gives way to ranch country, the Badlands, the Buffalo Gap National Grassland and the Lakota culture of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which sits directly across Pennington’s southeastern boundary.

We last visited Pennington County several months ago for a family vacation, and you’ll not be surprised to learn that all of those characteristics remain true. The Badlands haven’t disappeared and the Black Hills are still there, though there have been some monumental changes since the county was created in 1875. In its 142 years, Pennington County has become South Dakota’s prime tourist destination, with millions of travelers making plans to visit every year.

Badlands National Park protects over 240,000 acres of rugged landscape that spills into Pennington County.

Tourism likely wasn’t on the minds of territorial legislators when they created Pennington, Lawrence and Custer counties in one fell swoop, but current governor and county namesake John Pennington saw the move as way to help his friends and line his pockets. The governor named several of his closest allies in Yankton to lead offices in the new county rather than fill those positions with people who lived in the area. The slight became worse when the new officials chose to stay in Yankton instead of moving west. Rumors of corruption escalated even further when Pennington selected Sheridan over Rapid City as the new county seat. It was believed that Pennington held real estate near Sheridan, and its value was sure to increase with the town’s elevated status.

Locally elected officials soon replaced Pennington’s appointments, and the county seat was eventually relocated to Rapid City. But the governor remained unpopular in the Black Hills until William Howard succeeded him in 1878. Shady as his dealings may have been, we do hold a soft spot for Pennington since we publish South Dakota Magazine in his home, an 1875 brick Italianate building on the east end of Yankton’s Third Street. It’s the only territorial governor’s home remaining in South Dakota. Readers are welcome to stop by for a tour when they’re in town.

Our trip into Pennington County began on the Badlands Loop Road, a 31-mile detour off Interstate 90 that provides several scenic overviews of a landscape millions of years in the making. The kids enjoyed venturing out onto short trails, taking note of the”Watch for Rattlesnake” signs. Every now and then they would head off-trail, skipping over narrow chasms and climbing precarious points.

Mount Rushmore draws nearly 3 million visitors every year.

The Badlands Loop Road met Interstate 90 again at Wall, which meant a stop at Wall Drug. We spent a couple of hours perusing the many shops. I don’t think the kids believed that it all began with signs for free ice water, enticing motorists to stop at the town’s tiny drug store. I was impressed by the huge collection of original Western paintings that hang throughout the complex.

Our first morning in Rapid City began with coffee at the historic Fairmont Creamery building. Constructed in 1929, the space has undergone extensive renovations and now hosts several businesses, including Pure Bean.

Fully caffeinated, we made our way to Mount Rushmore, the grand jewel of tourism for Pennington County. Roughly 3 million people visit the national memorial every year. I’ve written a few stories covering different angles of Mount Rushmore, but it was nice to simply view the granite heads from the observation deck and to stroll along the Presidential Trail through the pines and see the sculpture from new perspectives.

Ellie Andrews served time in Presidential Pawn’s fictitious jail.

Back in Rapid City for the afternoon, we explored the lively downtown district, anchored by the new Main Street Square. Children laughed and splashed in the fountain while families lounged in the green space. We strolled the vibrant and ever-changing Art Alley, where business-owners gladly allow the drab back halves of their buildings to become colorful street paintings. We saw the world’s smallest taxidermied dog inside Presidential Pawn and enjoyed a meal at the Firehouse, Rapid City’s original fire station converted into a restaurant and brewpub.

For part of our trip, we stayed at Newton Fork Ranch, a former working ranch that has been converted in a series of cabins set about a mile outside of Hill City. From here, we had easy access to Prairie Berry Winery, the Miner Brewing Company and the 1880 Train, which travels round trip from Hill City to Keystone along the old Chicago, Burlington and Quincy line.

We took advantage of other popular stops in Pennington County. We traveled through Bear Country and saw mountain lions, timber wolves in captivity, and bears as they sauntered past our car. There were doubts about whether or not some in our party would be able to successfully navigate the crooked cabins of the Cosmos Mystery Area, but once the surroundings stopped spinning and the nausea became tolerable, everyone completed the tour. The Cosmos is a very weird place where tennis balls appear to roll uphill, and uneven ground proves to be completely level. Two college students discovered the peculiar place in 1952 as they searched for land on which to build a summer cabin. They immediately noticed the unusual forces and created demonstrations that have confused visitors ever since. But it really isn’t for everyone. Several people on our tour seriously struggled with balance and a few even mentioned headaches.

Joe Andrews enjoys a leisurely ride on the 1880 Train.

That sounds like a busy trip, but we truly only scratched the surface of things to do in Pennington County. We missed the amazing museum at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, and Reptile Gardens just south of Rapid City. We could have spent a day at Pactola or Deerfield lakes or made the pilgrimage to the top of Black Elk Peak, the highest point in South Dakota and the tallest peak in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains. When we were there, the promontory was still known as Harney Peak, in honor of Gen. William Harney, a 19th century military commander stationed in the area. But in August 2016, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names changed the moniker to Black Elk Peak for the legendary Lakota holy man whose vision quest atop the mountain was immortalized in John Neihardt’s classic book Black Elk Speaks.

Missing out on all of those other activities simply means another trip is in order, perhaps in the summer of 2017. And I bet the ponderosa pines, the rugged Badlands, doughnuts and coffee at Wall Drug and the four granite faces of Mount Rushmore will still be there, waiting for us.

Editor’s Note: This is the 32nd installment in an ongoing series featuring South Dakota’s 66 counties. Click here for previous articles.

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Coming Home

The verdict is still out. Some friends say I’ve found mature contentment and others claim I’m turning into a stay-at-home curmudgeon.

At issue is the fact that I’ve often traveled out of state in the last year. Sometimes I’ve flown and sometimes I’ve driven but either way, friends say, I’m more inclined to talk about how good it is to return home rather than describe the marvels found in Texas, Minnesota, Montana, Ohio and elsewhere.

This trend began when I spent time in Minneapolis and couldn’t muster the enthusiasm to buy cheap Timberwolves tickets. Then five minutes after crossing into South Dakota via I-90 I heard a radio commercial about a high school boys basketball triple-header at the Corn Palace, and I made a beeline for Mitchell. Of course, what’s a Corn Palace triple-header without a pregame steak at Chef Louie? What an evening: Chef Louie, three games in one of the nation’s unique and most comfortable basketball venues, and good visits with folk from Mitchell, Howard and Stickney. I wouldn’t trade the evening for any NBA ticket.

Anyway, back home in Spearfish, I maybe talked a little too enthusiastically about my big night in Mitchell, maybe even called the Chef Louie and Corn Palace combo the ultimate South Dakota winter experience, and some relatives and friends said I was no longer the jump-on-a-jet-and-see-the-country guy they once knew.

Some other things I’ve found thoroughly enthralling upon returning home (home being anywhere within South Dakota’s borders):

Interstate 90 and Interstate 29

Like most South Dakotans I’ve bashed these highways over the years, saying they’re boring compared to two-lane roads that conform to the prairie’s roll and pitch. But, unlike some eastern turnpikes, they’re toll-free, well marked, and food and fuel services are immediately adjacent. Speaking of fuel …

Mighty Few Pre-Pay Gas Pumps

In some parts of the country, wanting to pay for anything in cash makes you somewhat suspect. So you’re expected to pay for your gas before pumping it. A gasoline purchase is a business transaction. Leave it to South Dakota, a state that still prides itself in conducting business on a handshake, to believe a customer should be trusted to fuel up and then walk 50 feet in full view to the cashier.

Sioux Falls’ Small Town Charm

I know Sioux Falls sometimes promotes itself as urban, and maybe that’s smart, but thank goodness it isn’t a true big city. Re-entering the state from south or east, up I-29 or along I-90, I sometimes stop for coffee or lunch at one of Phillips Avenue’s sidewalk cafes. Pulling off the I-229 bypass I can be in the heart of downtown in 10 minutes, placing my order instead of navigating through rings of suburbs. And the inclusive sidewalk conversations and eye contact are anything but big city — especially noticeable if you’ve spent the previous days in ¸ber-urban America.

America’s Best Highway Rest Stop

It’s located at Chamberlain and offers a sweeping view of the Missouri River/Lake Francis Case. Plus there’s a Lewis and Clark museum display, wide lawns, trails, picnic shelters and spotless restrooms. This rest stop so out-distances others that I can’t even think where the nation’s number two or number three stops might be.

Scenic Overlook At I-90 Mile Marker 138

It’s an OK view of the wide prairie, especially at sunset. But if you’re a West River resident returning from the east, the scenery isn’t what impresses you here. Rather, this is where the air starts smelling right again: clear, dry, spiced by grama grass.

Wall Drug Donuts

A few years ago, when the rest of America was going bonkers over Krispy Kreme doughnuts and deciding they were the world’s best, South Dakotans knew better.

Crow Peak View

At Elkhorn Ridge, near I-90 exit 17, westbound traffic makes a wide turn and the whole north range of the Black Hills comes into view. A minute later, mighty Crow Peak dominates the horizon. It stands right on the state’s western edge and I’ve always thought of it as a mammoth bookend, keeping our stories and personalities and traditions from toppling into Wyoming. For me Crow Peak also marks the end of my journeys; we live so close to its base that I can’t see it unless I back away half a mile or so. But I always know it’s there; I always sense its presence. Maybe it’s what keeps me in South Dakota instead of toppling away into the far West.

Editor’s Note: This column is revised from the September/October 2011 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call (800) 456-5117.

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All Roads Lead to Wall Drug

Where the heck is Wall Drug? It’s a question that lurks, like heat squiggles over the asphalt, on the margins of South Dakota highway horizons — always somewhere up ahead, until it isn’t.

As Interstate 90 unfurls into the Badlands from either, greener direction, the Wall Drug experience has established its imminence through incremental creep. The signposts form an outline. As you catch up with the miles ahead, imagination fills in the increasingly arid open spaces.

As the wheels turn, jagged layer cakes of geologic epoch expose themselves in rainbow bands, like color-coded race tracks for tiny ancestral horses. Somewhere out there Eohippus tries to close the gap on Mesohippus in the final lap. As I-90 rolls you back into a distant past, you find yourself in a prehistoric diorama with strange roadside attractions where ice water accumulates the exotic cachet of a saffron stigma.

It all started with ice water. Before the signs stretched to Wyoming and Minnesota like squares in a graphic novel told across untold acres, it started with ice water.

“The Wall Drug sign program started in 1936 when my grandmother, Dorothy Hustead, had an idea to let people know we were here, and they had no business,” says third generation Wall Drug owner Rick Hustead.”She went to the drug store to talk to [her husband] Ted and said, ‘Ted we should let people know we’re here. We should put up a sign: Get a soda. Get a beer. Turn next corner, just as near to Highway 16 & 14. Free ice water. Wall Drug Store.’ That was the first series of signs.”

The early signs were text only. Free ice water was a big enough draw. They worked almost instantly, saving a struggling business in the midst of the Depression.

Over the decades, the signs and the store grew together, expanded, became more elaborate. Ted and Dorothy’s son Bill was the visionary. He transformed the store into a Badlands oasis teeming with folklore as magical and organic as a jackalope pack hopping across a craggy ravine. Sign artists Dobby Hansen of Philip and Mike Kurtz of Rapid City, and others, built on the original idea and created what became an instantly recognizable aesthetic, populated with occasional, colorful frontier characters, as at home in the Badlands as a prickly pear or porcupine.

In 1991, Barry Knutson of Philip (originally from rural Haakon County, near Grindstone) — a carpenter/newspaper editor/National Guardsman — who had taken some art classes at SDSU began his own sign startup and, before he really even knew what he was doing, went right for the Big One next door.

“I got some encouragement from people in Philip and they said you should do some signs. Because Dobby Hanson was really good at what he did, but he had passed away. And so they were like, you know what, you should go check and see if they have any openings. I ran into Teddy Hustead, didn’t know who he was at the time, and so I said, ‘I do carpentry. I’d like to do some of your signs. I think I’d be good at it.’ He said, ‘Right now we have three of the best sign painters in South Dakota, we’re good.'”

“We talked a little bit longer and he said you know what, you got a tape measure. Let’s go measure for this one thing. We’re going to put in a kind of animal backyard thing. Why don’t you go and make me a three little pigs sign. I said how big? He said, ‘About this big.’ Just made hand movements. So I came up with the sign. Went home, got a piece of plywood. Painted the sign. I didn’t really know what I was doing at all. We used the wrong paints. We didn’t have the right brushes. Didn’t have the right boards. Took it back to him. It was a cute three little pigs sign. And it was up for a while. Then when that happened he said, ‘You know what, why don’t you give him some more sign board and tell him what to do and we’ll give him another sign.’ And that led to another sign. And now here we are 25 years later and we are doing all of their signs now.”

In the early years, Knutson the artist had to hold back a little to stay within the Wall Drug tradition of text-heavy, for road read-ability, signs. As he became a better sign painter, he gradually sold the Husteads on more figurative artwork, starting with imagery from classic Wall Drug post cards and updates on the occasional classic sign that did include imagery.

“They wanted bold, brief messages. And then we would kind of throw artwork in as we could, started incorporating the two together. We saw the value of little art pieces and other sign painters did too. It wasn’t like we were geniuses.”

Knutson is obsessive about finding the right balance, and sweats every detail.

He sands his signs before painting them — after they’re primed and taped — to create sharper lines. He’s become a master of spectral fades. The signposts and the backs of every sign are painted Wall Drug’s signature green. Every bolt is aligned, in its right place. (Barr’s Sign Studio sees every sign through from design to installation.)

He learned everything he knows about signs from on-the-job experience, developing a meticulous set of SOP’s some sign painters might consider wasted time. He always paints them on a flat surface, not standing up against a wall.”We’ve tried both. We can put a thick layer of paint on them [when they’re laying flat] so they have a glossy finish when we’re done. And they hold up so much longer.” Longevity is a big part of the equation. Wall Drug is not a faddy brand. Designs can last decades. Signs do too.

In a quarter decade of painting Wall Drug signs (as well as signs for Al’s Oasis, the Ranch Store and other assorted attractions), and (currently) as the sole visual ambassador from Wall Drug to the highways of the upper Midwest, Knutson and family — Edna Knutson (a First Lieutenant in the South Dakota Army National Guard’s Medical Command), and daughters Kianna and Katlin — have made an unmistakable imprint on an iconic brand.

They’ve changed it. They’ve kept it the same.

“With Wall Drug, you want to keep up with the new trends, but you’re almost not allowed to without losing who you are,” Knutson says.”So that’s always been a challenge. How much can we do? How far can you go without changing who you are and what people expect you to be? I think right at first when I started doing signs, I was like, I’m going to change Wall Drug a little bit. And once I started doing that I really realized what Wall Drug is. It’s the tradition.

“We don’t always throw in the yellow and the green, but when you ask people, they just traveled across the state and there’s 200 signs and maybe 150 of them have yellow and green. In their mind, that’s all we use. In everything, we’re trying to make the signs so that before you come up on them you say, ‘That’s a Wall Drug sign.’ We do try to work in new designs. But that’s a problem. How can they have their grandparents saying, ‘This is Wall Drug,’ and their grandkids knowing and connecting with their grandparents in that same feeling of nostalgia that kids don’t even know exists?”

That’s the existential Wall Drug sign question: how to honor the tradition while keeping it a living tradition? Knutson talks about that problem like a man who thinks about it, all the time. And it shows. The Knutson family has walked the line.

Do they realize that their collective vision has become an intrinsic feature of the South Dakota travel experience, as indispensable as antelope herds or a giant concrete prairie dog? Maybe sometimes. Occasionally tourists, mostly European, walk in to the sign shop.

“It’s really neat when you go to a restaurant, and you go back to the restroom and in one of the hallways they have a picture of a Wall Drug sign,” Knutson says.”You never realize it sometimes, because it’s just a job some days. And you never feel like you quite give enough. That’s my deal, I always feel like I have to give a little bit more. I want to improve. It’s never quite enough.”

Barry Knutson, the meticulous man from Grindstone, who never cuts a corner to save time or effort on a sign, has created a roadside story that infuses the road ahead with wonder, sometimes with a question — like the groovily lettered “Have You Dug Wall Drug?” Or with happy-at-home gumbo country friends — like the potbellied cowboy bathing in his happy horse’s watering trough. His South Dakota story offers a link to an imaginary past — the only kind of past that’s happy. In letters and characters, his Wall Drug signs build up over the miles into an episodic tableau — a story of South Dakota the traveler co-authors along the way.

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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The Great Tradition of Wall

There’s a classic Andy Griffith Show episode where a stranger arrives in Mayberry and greets residents by their first names even though they have no clue who he is. He knows everyone’s family history and day-to-day business.

All of which spooks the locals to the point that they insist Sheriff Andy do something — preferably run the stranger out of town. Turns out, though, the stranger is harmless. He always dreamed of calling a small town his home, so he adopts Mayberry and subscribes to its newspaper from afar. After learning all he can from the paper, he shows up to walk the streets and say hello face to face.

I mention the episode because I am to Wall what that stranger was to Mayberry. I’ve never lived in Wall, but I’ve thought about it and I read the Pennington County Courant. I recognize lots of faces when I drop by on cross-state journeys. I’m the guy who orders one of those big Wall Drug donuts and washes it down with half a dozen cups of nickel coffee early mornings at the store. I’m the semi-regular who likes the Mexican fare at the Cactus Cafe and prime rib at the Red Rock Restaurant. Golden Badlands autumns are my favorite time of year in Wall, and you may spot me strolling the streets enjoying spectacular prairie sunsets or cheering for the Eagles out at the football field. Christmas season starts for me the day in December when I pull up to the drugstore and erase the chill with one of those nickel coffees as I admire the season-themed Western art (if you’re not from North America and wonder what the heck donuts, nickel coffee and art have to do with a drugstore, just hold on a minute).

Photo by Greg Latza.

The main difference between myself and the Mayberry stranger is that no one has called the sheriff on me. But Wall is much more accustomed to out-of-towners than Mayberry. About 820 people call Wall home, and on a typical summer day they will be outnumbered by visitors 15 to 1. Whatever else travelers may do in Wall, most think of the town as a jumping off point, a place to contemplate strategies for fully enjoying the Black Hills, an hour west, or Minuteman Missile National Historic Site or Badlands National Park, each minutes away. The Badlands — that starkly beautiful region of hardpan buttes, pinnacles and ridiculously balanced boulders — is divided north and south by a nine-mile series of rugged ridges. This”wall” is a genuine barrier, one the Lakota and other native people reckoned with in their travels, as did open range cowboys as they moved herds. The wall inspired the name when the town sprang to life in 1907, the year the Chicago and North Western railroad finished tracks from the Missouri River to the Black Hills. Homesteaders from all parts of the world rode trains into the Wall vicinity and within 25 years the town claimed a population of 300. Then came the hard natural blows of the 1930s: desperate drought, blinding dust storms, hordes of grasshoppers the size of a man’s thumb. The Dust Bowl drove a few of Wall’s neighboring communities into oblivion but, in a strange way, it breathed life into Wall. So desperate were ranching conditions that the federal government declared some land sub-marginal — not able to support agriculture — and started buying acres. Eventually the government owned over 240,000 acres and that was the beginning of Badlands National Park. Pull up a chair with almost-retired ranchers drinking coffee at the Cactus, though, and they’ll emphasize that agriculture never went away. There’s good grazing in the area, winter and spring wheat, and even row crops thanks to new drought resistant seeds. The National Grasslands Visitor Center on Main Street does a great job showing how the Great Plains bounced back from the Dust Bowl.

If creation of the national park and conservation stemming from the Dust Bowl made possible Wall’s key natural resources, the 1930s also saw the genesis of the town’s most valuable man-made asset. In 1931 Ted and Dorothy Hustead, a young couple just two-and-a-half years out of the University of Nebraska, arrived looking for three things: good schools, a Catholic church, and a drug store for sale. Hustead was a pharmacist and the local drug store sold only over-the-counter medicines, not prescriptions. The town doctor, G.W. Mills, told Ted that Wall needed a pharmacist and predicted he could do well. Mills was right, but certainly he couldn’t have imagined the now-classic American success story about to unfold.

In a moment of inspiration during the hot summer of 1936, Dorothy suggested the drug store might supplement its revenue by pulling travelers off Highway 16, the dusty east-west route across South Dakota in those years before Interstate 90. The bait Dorothy proposed to lure travelers? Free ice water as advertised on roadside signs the Husteads erected. In the days prior to air-conditioned cars the ice water offer had lots of takers, and the Husteads also provided friendly conversation, ice cream and Badlands and Black Hills souvenirs. Eventually there would be mechanized cowboy musicians, full meals, a bookstore emphasizing American Indian and western history, western wear, a travelers’ chapel, historical photos, 300 original paintings including works by Harvey Dunn and N.C. Wyeth and even a snarling mechanized Tyrannosaurus rex. Yes, there’s still free ice water, too.

“A while back we made a widely published list as one of the country’s top roadside attractions,” says Ted H. Hustead, Ted and Dorothy’s grandson.”Then just a week or so later we made another list as one of America’s biggest tourist traps. I always say whatever the list, good or bad, it doesn’t matter as long as we’re on it.”

The contemporary Ted and his brother, Rick, run the drug store as a partnership. Ted credits his grandfather for”building the infrastructure for everything that was to come, not only at the drug store, but for the community. Wall didn’t even have running water when he arrived.”

Bill Hustead, Ted and Rick’s dad and a pharmacist like his own father, was the second generation to run the store and, Ted reflects,”he was the dreamer, Mr. Romantic, who wanted to build up a distinctive business we’d all be proud of. And he built solidly. People who look at Wall Drug photos might think it’s mostly facades, but the storefronts in our mall and other features are two-by-four and two-by-two construction. Real lumber, real brick, real marble table tops, and decorated with real paintings.”

Ted and Rick, unlike their late grandfather and father, aren’t pharmacists. Denny Womeldorf has held that position at Wall Drug the past couple decades. Rick has a counseling degree. Ted studied at Harvard Business School in the era when many of his classmates were focused on the dot.com entrepreneurial trend that began in the 1990s. Still, some of those classmates knew of storied Wall Drug, and they appreciated the perspective Ted brought from small town South Dakota. He returned with ideas for his own business and an appreciation for his dad’s business instincts.”Maybe he used different terminology than you’d hear in a business school, but he knew the concepts,” Ted says.

Harvard also exposed Ted to a chilling reality: third generation business owners typically don’t do well and, in fact, often run the enterprise into the ground. It’s a rags-to-riches-to-rags phenomenon recognized in all of the world’s business cultures.

Photo by Greg Latza.

“But it won’t happen here,” Ted promises.”When you grow up within a business that’s already well-developed, you might have big blinders on. So you have to take another hard look and decide what your business really is. We’ve decided Wall Drug is show business, that the store is a stage, and that our job is to make sure the show goes on.”

The brothers spend plenty of time on this stage, tending cash registers, greeting customers and staff, or grabbing window wash and a cloth to wipe away smudges. They are beating that third generation curse, having enjoyed good numbers despite $4 gas and a recession.

That’s obviously good news to Mayor Dave Hahn. Thanks to tourism, he notes,”We have the same sales tax revenue in this town of 800 people as some towns with 5,000 people.”

Originally from northeastern South Dakota, Hahn arrived in Wall in 1971 as school superintendent (serving a district, he observes, about the size of Rhode Island). Liking the town and its moderate climate, compared to the opposite corner of the state, Hahn decided to chart his own course for remaining long-term. He bought a hardware store and later a service station and in short order became involved in local government. He’s served as mayor for 27 years.

“It seemed like every time I decided I wanted to get out of the job, another project would come up where I thought I could be of benefit,” he explains. Hahn believes the community must invest in amenities that will attract visitors and new residents. Not that he expects a population boom, but for a small town Wall claims big employers. The amenities help major employers attract the best staff. Along with the Rhode Island-sized school district, these employers include the drug store, West River Electric Association, and Golden West Telephone and Telecommunications. Golden West ranks high nationally in its service reach.”We stretch across southern South Dakota, 24,533 square miles,” observes Jody Bielmaier, member services manager. Then she uses the same technique Mayor Hahn and others here use to drive home rural South Dakota’s vast geography, adding:”About the size of West Virginia.”

Wall’s new public school, a striking geothermal-heated building that opened in fall 2005, is an amenity for families considering a move here. Originally the school was designed without a gym but residents decided their kids shouldn’t have to play in the old facility, far off campus. So community members raised nearly a million dollars for a gym with a beautiful hardwood floor. The old gym became a large, well-equipped fitness center that’s school property and serves students and the community. The city puts some funding into its operation and no one pays a membership or daily use fee. That’s a huge surprise to visitors and Wall Drug seasonal employees and others who drop by for the first time. They’re happy recipients of a valuable community amenity.

Development of the new gym, says Dick Johnson, exemplifies community spirit. Johnson moved here in 1998, works as manager of finance for West River Electric, and serves as president of the chamber of commerce’s economic development committee.

“In Wall,” Johnson says,”there’s a tradition of individuals and businesses pooling their money to put into projects that benefit the entire community. A lot of that happens through the First Western Greater Wall Foundation, which has had a huge impact.”

It certainly has. Formed in 1988, the Foundation has channeled dollars toward scholarships for graduating high school seniors, local health services, the golf course, swimming pool, Neighborhood Housing, 4-H activities, rodeo booster club, and volunteer ambulance services — to name just a few recipients.

Rarely can small towns boast of national parks in their backyards. Rarer still are those that have enjoyed the likes of Ted and Dorothy Hustead.”But,” thinks Johnson,”a lot of places would be different if people had a vision of what their town could be, and were willing to put money back into their community.”

He’s right. Along with its other assets, there’s confidence and pride in Wall that even a stranger passing through senses immediately.

Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the September/October 2009 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.