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The Black Hills of Dakota" is a song written by Sammy Fain (music) and Paul Francis Webster (lyrics) written for the 1953 musical film Calamity Jane. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The song describes a love for the Black Hills region of South Dakota held by the film's fictionalized version of Calamity Jane .
"The Report of Captain John Mix of a Scout to the Black Hills, March-April 1875" (PDF). South Dakota History. 7 (4). South Dakota State Historical Society: 385– 401 "Gordon Stockade". The Wi-Iyohi. 15 (11). South Dakota State Historical Society: 1– 8. February 1, 1962 – via South Dakota Digital Archives.
"'Dakota's Finest': A Sampler of Early South Dakota Brewing History". South Dakota History Vol. 42, No. 4 Winter 2012. South Dakota State Historical Society Press. (Staff) (May 17, 2013). "SD craft beer breweries". The Daily Republic. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014
From our obsession with sweet tea to our no-rush mindset, there are some things about the South and Southern people that—bless their hearts—the rest of the country just can't understand. And ...
After a series of devastating wildfires in 1893, U.S. President Grover Cleveland created the Black Hills Forest Reserve on February 22, 1897. [5] U.S. President William McKinley issued a presidential proclamation on September 19, 1898, appending the Black Hills Forest Reserve geographic boundaries while acknowledging the forest preservation decrees established by the Timber Culture Act and ...
The Sitting Bull Crystal Cavern Dance Pavilion is a historic event venue on the south side of U.S. Highway 16 northeast of Rockerville, South Dakota, near the Sitting Bull Crystal Caverns. Built in 1934, it hosted the Duhamel Sioux Indian Pageant, a Lakota tourist performance created by Black Elk in 1927. The pageant ran every summer until its ...
The plateau has numerous small glacial lakes and is drained by the Big Sioux River in South Dakota and the Cottonwood River in Minnesota. Pipestone deposits on the plateau have been quarried for hundreds of years by Native Americans , who use the prized, brownish-red mineral to make their sacred ceremonial pipes .
Trains still pass by there daily. There is outdoor seating, too. Closed on Mondays. Go: 101 Cooper Street, 856-384-6700. Consider a digital subscription to support our journalism.