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List of free daily newspapers in the United States; List of weekly newspapers in the United States; Circulation. List of international newspapers originating in the United States; List of national newspapers in the United States; List of newspapers in the United States by circulation; List of newspapers serving cities over 100,000 in the United ...
It is part of a family owned newspaper and digital media company providing local journalism to western South Dakota. It is the official newspaper for Lawrence County, Meade County, and Butte County, including the towns of Spearfish, Lead, Deadwood, Whitewood, Sturgis, Vale, Newell, Nisland, and Belle Fourche, reaching nearly 5,000 subscribers ...
Chester Allan Poage (July 4, 1980 – March 13, 2000) [1] was an American man who was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered by three men in Spearfish, South Dakota, on March 13, 2000. Elijah Page, Briley Piper, and Darrell Hoadley were convicted of the torture and murder of Poage.
Spearfish (Lakota: Hočhápȟe [5]) is a city in Lawrence County, South Dakota, United States. The population was 12,193 at the time of the 2020 census, making it the 10th most populous city in South Dakota. [6] Spearfish is the largest city in Lawrence County and the home of Black Hills State University.
This page was last edited on 29 January 2017, at 21:42 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Argus Leader is South Dakota's largest newspaper in total circulation as of 2023. [2] The weekday circulation for the newspaper was 23,721 as of October 2017. [12] The Sunday edition has a circulation of 32,981 as of October 2017. Its website boasts the most traffic and unique visitors in its market, according to Comscore data. [13]
North Spearfish is located in northern Lawrence County at (44.507983, -103.885173), [6] on the northwest side of the city of Spearfish, the largest community in the county Interstate 90 runs along the northern edge of the CDP, with access from Exit 8 (McGuigan Road).
The Dakota Freie Presse or the Dakota Free Press, abbreviated as DFP, was a weekly German language newspaper printed in Yankton, Dakota Territory (now South Dakota). It circulated in the Dakotas and other states, Canada, and Europe, from 1874 to 1954. [1] The newspaper was non-denominational and neutral in politics.