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Rapid City, Black Hills and Western Railroad: 1909 1948 N/A Rapid City, Missouri River and St. Paul Railroad: CNW: 1891 1905 Pierre, Rapid City and North-Western Railway: St. Paul and Dakota Railroad: CNW: 1876 1878 Worthington and Sioux Falls Railroad: St. Paul, Minneapolis and Manitoba Railway: GN: 1886 1907 Great Northern Railway: St. Paul ...
Rapid City: 49: Rapid City West Boulevard Historic District: Rapid City West Boulevard Historic District: December 31, 1974 : Bordered by Kansas City, Fairview, 11th, 7th, and 8th Sts. • Boundary increase (listed July 7, 1995, refnum 95000770): Roughly the area surrounding 9th, 10th, and 11th Sts. from Kansas City St. to St. Andrews St.
The Rapid City Historic Commercial District, sometimes called the Rapid City Downtown Historic District, is a 21-acre (8.5 ha), multi-block historic district in downtown Rapid City, South Dakota, United States. It includes 47 commercial buildings dating from the late 19th to early 20th centuries that formed the core of Rapid City's early economy.
The Rapid City, Black Hills and Western Railroad, also known simply as the Black Hills and Western Railroad and commonly referred to as the Rapid Canyon Line or the Crouch Line, [1] is a defunct standard gauge freight railroad line that operated in the Black Hills in the U.S. state of South Dakota.
Eureka is an unincorporated census-designated place in the town of Rushford, in Winnebago County, Wisconsin, United States. It is located on the Fox River at the intersection of county highways K & E southwest of Omro. [3] At the 2020 census, its population was 247. [4]
South Dakota Highway 79 (SD 79) is a 209-mile (336 km) state highway in western South Dakota, United States, that runs from Maverick Junction near the Black Hills National Forest to the North Dakota state line.
The South Dakota State Historical Society, after an initial meeting in April, was founded on May 7, 1862 as the Old Settlers Association of Dakota Territory. [2] It was renamed the Historical Society of Dakota in 1863 and the South Dakota Historical Society in 1890, months after the state was admitted to the union.
Through South Dakota, the route runs 160 miles (257 km) from Rapid City to the North Dakota state line. [2] The route runs concurrent with Interstate 90/U.S. Route 14 from Rapid City at an interchange with Interstate 190/U.S. Route 16 west through Sturgis en route to Spearfish where it turns north onto U.S. 85.