South Dakota ( ) is a
state located in the Midwestern region of the United States of
America
. It is named after the
Lakota and
Dakota
Sioux American Indian
tribes. South Dakota was carved out of the southern half of the
Dakota Territory and admitted to
the Union on November 2, 1889.
Centrally located Pierre
is the state capital and Sioux Falls
is the state's largest city.As of 2008,
South Dakota had an estimated population of 804,194.
South
Dakota is bisected by the Missouri River
, dividing the state into two socioeconomically
distinct halves, known to residents as "West
River
" and "East
River". Fertile soil in the eastern part of the state is
used to grow a variety of crops, while
ranching is the predominant agricultural activity in
the west.
The Black Hills
, a group of low pine-covered mountains, is located
in the southwest part of the state. The area is of great
religious importance to local American Indian tribes.
Mount Rushmore
is a major state tourist
destination in the Black Hills.
Historically dominated by an agricultural economy and a rural
lifestyle, South Dakota has recently sought to diversify its
economy to attract and retain residents. However, it is still
largely rural and has the fifth-lowest
population density
among U.S. states. While several
Democratic senators have represented South Dakota
for multiple terms at the federal level, the state government is
largely dominated by the
Republican Party, which has
carried South Dakota in the last eleven
presidential
elections.
Geography
Geographic and political features of South Dakota
South Dakota is situated in the north-central United States, and is
considered to be a part of the
Midwest by
the U.S.
Census Bureau, although the Great Plains
region also covers the state. Additionally,
the culture, economy, and geography of western South Dakota has
more in common with the
West
than the Midwest. South Dakota has a total land area of
77,116 sq. miles (199,905 km
2), making the
state the
17th
largest in the Union.
Harney
Peak
, with an elevation of , is the state's highest
point, while the shoreline of Big Stone Lake
is the lowest, with an elevation of .
South
Dakota is bordered to the north by North Dakota
; to the south by Nebraska
; to the east by Iowa
and Minnesota
; and to the west by Wyoming
and Montana
.
The
geographical center of the U.S. is 17 miles (27 km.) west
of Castle Rock in Butte County
.
The
Missouri
River
is the largest and longest river in the
state. Other major South Dakota rivers include the
Cheyenne,
James,
Big
Sioux, and
White
Rivers. Eastern South Dakota has many natural lakes, mostly created
by periods of glaciation.
Additionally, dams on the
Missouri River create four large reservoirs: Lake Oahe
, Lake Sharpe, Lake Francis Case, and Lewis and
Clark Lake
.
Regions and geology
South
Dakota can generally be divided into three regions: eastern South
Dakota, western South Dakota, and the Black Hills
. The Missouri River serves as a boundary in
terms of geographic, social and political differences between
eastern and western South Dakota, and the geography of the Black
Hills differs from its surroundings to such an extent that it can
be considered separate from the rest of western South Dakota.
South
Dakotans also at times combine the Black Hills with the rest of
western South Dakota, and refer to the two resulting regions,
divided by the Missouri, as West River
and East
River.

South Dakota terrain
Eastern South Dakota generally features higher precipitation and
lower topography than the western part of the state. Smaller
geographic regions of this area include the
Coteau des Prairies, the
Dissected Till Plains, and the James
River Valley. The Coteau des Prairies is a plateau bordered on the
east by the
Minnesota River Valley
and on the west by the James River Basin. Further to the west, the
James River Basin is mostly low, flat, highly eroded land,
following the flow of the
James
River through South Dakota from north to south. The Dissected
Till Plains, an area of rolling hills and fertile soil that covers
much of Iowa and Nebraska, also extends into the southeastern
corner of South Dakota. Layers deposited during the
Pleistocene epoch, starting around two million
years ago, cover most of eastern South Dakota. These are the
youngest rock and sediment layers in the state, and are the product
of several successive periods of
glaciation
which deposited a large amount of rocks and soil, known as
till, over the area.
The
Great
Plains
cover most of the western two-thirds of South
Dakota. West of the Missouri River the landscape becomes
more arid and rugged, consisting of rolling hills, plains, ravines,
and steep flat-topped hills called
buttes.
In the
south, east of the Black Hills, lie the South Dakota Badlands
. Erosion from the Black Hills, marine
skeletons which fell to the bottom of a large shallow sea that once
covered the area, and volcanic material all contribute to the
geology of this area.
The Black Hills are in the southwestern part of South Dakota and
extend into Wyoming. This range of low mountains covers
6,000 sq. mi (15,500
km².) with peaks that rise from 2,000 to
4,000 feet (600 to 1,200 m) above their bases.
The Black
Hills are the location of Harney Peak
(7,242 ft or 2,207 m above sea level),
the highest point in South Dakota and also the highest point in the
United States east of the Rocky
Mountains. Two billion-year-old
Precambrian formations, the oldest rocks in the
state, form the central core of the Black Hills. Formations from
the
Paleozoic Era form the outer ring
of the Black Hills; these were created between roughly 540 and 250
million years ago. This area features rocks such as
limestone which were deposited here when the area
formed the shoreline of an ancient inland sea.
Ecology
Much of South Dakota, not including the Black Hills, is dominated
by a temperate
grasslands biome. Although grasses and crops cover most of this
region,
deciduous trees such as
cottonwoods,
elms,
and
willows are common near rivers and in
shelter belts.
Mammals in this area include
bison,
deer,
pronghorn,
coyotes, and
prairie dogs. The state bird, the
ring-necked pheasant, has adapted
particularly well to the area after being introduced from China,
and growing populations of
bald eagles
are spread throughout the state, especially near the Missouri
River. Rivers and lakes of the grasslands support populations of
walleye,
carp,
pike, and
bass, along
with other species. The Missouri River also contains the
pre-historic
paddlefish.
Because of higher elevation and precipitation, the ecology of the
Black Hills differs significantly from that of the plains. The
mountains are thickly blanketed by various types of
pine, mostly of the
ponderosa and
spruce
varieties. Black Hills mammals include
mule
deer,
elk ,
bighorn
sheep,
mountain goats, and
mountain lions, while the streams and
lakes contain several species of
trout.
Climate
South Dakota has a
continental
climate with four distinct seasons, ranging from very cold, dry
winters to hot and semi-humid summers. During the summers, the
average high temperature throughout the state is often close to
90 °F (32 °C), although it generally cools down to near
60 °F (15 °C) at night. It is not unusual for South
Dakota to have severe hot, dry spells in the summer with the
temperature climbing above 100 °F (38 °C) several times
every year. Winters are cold with January high temperatures
averaging below freezing and low temperatures averaging below
10 °F (- 12 °C) in most of the state.
Average
annual precipitation in
South Dakota ranges from semi-arid in the northwestern part of the
state (around 15 inches, or 381 mm) to semi-humid around
the southeast portion of the state (around 25 inches, or
635 mm), although a small area centered around Lead
in the Black Hills has the highest precipitation at
nearly 30 inches (762 mm) per year.
South Dakota summers bring frequent, sometimes severe,
thunderstorms with high winds, thunder, and
hail. The eastern part of the state is often considered part of
Tornado Alley, and South Dakota
experiences an average of 29 tornadoes per year. Winters are
somewhat more stable, although severe weather in the form of
blizzards and
ice
storms can occur during the season.
| Monthly
Normal High and Low Temperatures For Various South Dakota Cities
(in degrees Fahrenheit) |
|
City |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Aberdeen |
21/1 |
28/9 |
40/21 |
57/33 |
70/46 |
79/55 |
85/60 |
84/57 |
73/46 |
59/34 |
39/20 |
26/6 |
| Rapid
City |
34/11 |
39/16 |
47/23 |
57/32 |
67/43 |
77/52 |
86/58 |
86/57 |
75/46 |
62/35 |
45/22 |
36/13 |
| Sioux
Falls |
25/3 |
32/10 |
44/21 |
59/32 |
71/45 |
81/54 |
86/60 |
83/58 |
74/48 |
61/35 |
42/21 |
29/8 |
|
National Parks and Monuments
South Dakota contains several sites that are administered by the
National Park Service.Two
national parks have been established
in South Dakota, both located in the southwestern part of the
state.
Wind Cave National Park
, established in 1903 in the Black Hills, contains
an extensive cave network as well as a large herd of bison. Badlands National Park
was created in 1978. The park features a
highly eroded, brightly colored landscape surrounded by
semi-arid grasslands.
Mount Rushmore
National Memorial in the Black Hills was
established in 1925. The sculpture of four U.S. Presidents
was carved into the mountainside by
sculptor Gutzon
Borglum.
Other areas managed by the National Park
Service include Jewel Cave National Monument
near Custer
, the Lewis and
Clark National Historic Trail
, the Minuteman
Missile National Historic Site
, which features a decommissioned nuclear missile silo and a separate
missile control area located several miles away, and the Missouri
National Recreational River
. The Crazy Horse Memorial
is a large mountainside sculpture near Mt.
Rushmore that is being constructed with private funds.
History
Humans have lived in what is today South Dakota for at least
several thousand years. The first inhabitants were
Paleolithic hunter-gatherers, and disappeared from the
area around 5000 BC. Between 500 AD and 800 AD, a
semi-nomadic people known as the Mound Builders lived in central
and eastern South Dakota, and by 1500 the
Arikara (or Ree) had settled in much of the Missouri
River valley. Nearly 500 people were the victims of the
Crow Creek massacre that occurred early
in the 14th century. European contact with the area began in 1743,
when the
LaVerendrye
brothers explored the region. The LaVerendrye group buried a plate
near the site of modern day Pierre, claiming the region for France
as part of
greater Louisiana.
By the early 19th century, the
Sioux had
largely replaced the Arikara as the dominant group in the
area.
In 1803, the United States purchased the
Louisiana Territory, an area that
included most of South Dakota, from
Napoleon Bonaparte, and President
Thomas Jefferson organized a group
commonly referred to as the "
Lewis and Clark Expedition" to
explore the newly acquired region.
In 1817, an American fur trading post was
set up at present-day Fort
Pierre
, beginning continuous American settlement of the
area. In 1855, the U.S.
Army bought Fort Pierre but abandoned it the
following year in favor of Fort Randall
to the south. Settlement by Americans and
Europeans was by this time increasing rapidly, and in 1858 the
Yankton Sioux signed the
1858 Treaty, ceding most of
present-day eastern South Dakota to the United States.
Land
speculators founded two of eastern South Dakota's largest
present-day cities: Sioux
Falls
in 1856 and Yankton
in 1859. In 1861, the Dakota Territory was established by the
United States government (this initially included North Dakota
, South Dakota, and parts of Montana
and Wyoming
). Settlement of the area, mostly by people
from the eastern United States as well as western and northern
Europe, increased rapidly, especially after the completion of an
eastern railway link to Yankton in 1873 and the discovery of gold
in the Black
Hills
in 1874 during a military expedition led by
George A. Custer. This expedition took place despite
the fact that the western half of present day South Dakota had been
granted to the Sioux in 1868 by the
Treaty of Laramie as part of
the
Great Sioux Reservation.
The Sioux declined to grant
mining rights or
land in the Black Hills, and war broke out after the U.S. failed to
stop white miners and settlers from entering the region. The Sioux
were eventually defeated and settled on reservations within South
Dakota and North Dakota.
An increasing population caused the Dakota Territory to be divided
in half and a
bill for
statehood for both Dakotas titled the
Enabling Act of 1889 was passed on
February 22, 1889 during the Administration of
Grover Cleveland. His successor,
Benjamin Harrison, signed proclamations
formally admitting both states on November 2, 1889. Harrison had
the papers shuffled to obscure from him which he was signing first
and the actual order went unrecorded.
On December 29, 1890, the
Wounded
Knee Massacre occurred on the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
Commonly cited as the last major armed conflict between the United
States and the Sioux Nation, the massacre resulted in the deaths of
an estimated 300 Sioux, many of them women and children.
Twenty-five U.S. soldiers were also killed in the conflict. The
Wounded Knee area was later the site of a
prolonged siege between members of the
American Indian Movement
and the
United States
Marshals Service in 1973.
During the 1930s, several economic and climatic conditions combined
with disastrous results for South Dakota. A lack of rainfall,
extremely high temperatures and over-cultivation of farmland
produced what was known as the
Dust Bowl
in South Dakota and several other plains states. Fertile
topsoil was blown away in massive dust storms, and
several harvests were completely ruined. The experiences of the
Dust Bowl, coupled with local bank
foreclosures and the general economic effects of
the
Great Depression resulted in
many South Dakotans leaving the state. The population of South
Dakota declined by more than 7% between 1930 and 1940.
Economic stability returned with the U.S. entry into
World War II in 1941, when demand for the
state's agricultural and industrial products grew as the nation
mobilized for war. In 1944, the
Pick-Sloan Plan was passed as part of the
Flood Control Act of 1944
by the U.S. Congress, resulting in the construction of six large
dams on the Missouri River, four of which are at least partially
located in South Dakota. Flood control,
hydroelectricity, and recreational
opportunities such as boating and fishing are provided by the dams
and their reservoirs.
In recent decades, South Dakota has transformed from a state
dominated by agriculture to one with a more diversified economy.
The tourism industry has grown considerably since the completion of
the interstate system in the 1960s, with the Black Hills being
especially impacted. The financial service industry began to grow
in the state as well, with
Citibank moving
its credit card operations from New York to Sioux Falls in 1981, a
move that has since been followed by several other financial
companies, after South Dakota became the first state to eliminate
caps on
interest rates.
In 2007, the site of the recently closed
Homestake gold mine
near Lead
was chosen as the location of a new underground
research facility. Despite a growing state population and
recent economic development, many rural areas have been struggling
over the past 50 years with locally declining populations and the
emigration of educated young adults to larger South Dakota cities,
such as Rapid City or Sioux Falls, or to other states.
Demographics

South Dakota Population Density
Map
Population
According to the
U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2006, South Dakota
has an estimated population of 781,919, an increase of 27,075, or
3.6%, since the year 2000. 7.0% of South Dakota's population were
reported as under 5, 24.9% under 18, and 14.2% were 65 or older.
Females made up approximately 50.0% of the population. As of the
2000 census, South Dakota ranked fifth-lowest in the nation in both
population and population density.
The center of population of South Dakota is
located in Buffalo County
, in the unincorporated county seat of Gannvalley
.
Race and ethnicity
As of the 2005-2007
American
Community Survey conducted by the
U.S. Census
Bureau,
White Americans made up
87.4% of South Dakota's population,
American Indians made up
8.2% of the state's population,
Blacks
or
African Americans made up 1.0%
of South Dakota's population,
Asian
Americans made up 0.9% of the state's population, and
Pacific Islander Americans made up
less than 0.1% of the state's population. Individuals from some
other race made up 0.7% of the state's population and individuals
from
two or more races made up
1.8% of the state's population. In addition,
Hispanics and Latinos made up
2.1% of South Dakota's population.
The five largest ancestry groups in South Dakota are:
German (40.7%),
Norwegian (15.3%),
Irish (10.4%),
Native American (8.3%), and
English (7.1%). German-Americans
are the largest ancestry group in most parts of the state,
especially in the east, although there are also large Scandinavian
populations in some counties. South Dakota has the nation's largest
population of
Hutterites, a communal
Anabaptist group who emigrated from
Europe in 1874.
American Indians, largely Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota (Sioux) are
predominant in several counties.
South Dakota has the third highest
proportion of Native Americans of any state, behind Alaska
and New Mexico
. Five of the state's counties are wholly
within
Indian reservations.
Living standards on many reservations are often very low when
compared with the national average.
The unemployment rate in Fort
Thompson
, on the Crow Creek Indian Reservation,
is 70%, and 21% of households there lack plumbing or basic kitchen
appliances. A 1995 study by the U.S. Census Bureau found
that 58% of homes on the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
did not have a telephone.
As of the 2000 census, 1.90% of the population aged 5 or older
speak
German at home, while 1.51%
speak
Dakota, and 1.43%
Spanish.
Growth and rural flight
South Dakota, in common with other Great Plains states, has been
experiencing a falling population in many rural areas over the last
several decades, a phenomenon known as "
rural flight". This trend has continued in
recent years, with 30 of South Dakota's counties losing population
between the 1990 and the 2000 census.
During that time,
nine counties experienced a population loss of greater than 10%,
with Harding
County
, in the northwest corner of the state, losing
nearly 19% of its population. Low birth rates and a lack of
younger immigration has caused the median age of many of these
counties to increase. In 24 counties, at least 20% of the
population is over the age of 65, compared with a national rate of
12.5%.
The effect of rural flight has not been spread evenly through South
Dakota, however. Although most rural counties and small towns have
lost population, the Sioux Falls area, the larger counties along
Interstate 29, the
Black Hills, and many Indian reservations have all gained
population.
In fact, Lincoln
County
, near Sioux Falls, is the ninth-fastest growing
county (by percentage) in the United States. The growth in
these areas has compensated for losses in the rest of the state,
and South Dakota's total population continues to increase steadily,
albeit at a slower rate than the national average.
Religion
The largest denominations by number of adherents in 2000 were the
Roman Catholic Church with
181,434 members; the
Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA) with 121,871 members; and the
United Methodist Church (UMC) with
37,280 members. (Both the ELCA and UMC are specific denominations
within the broader terms 'Lutheran' and 'Methodist',
respectively.)The results of a 2001 survey, in which South Dakotans
were asked to identify their religion, include:
Economy
The current-dollar
gross state
product of South Dakota was
US$$37 billion as of 2008, the fifth
smallest total state output in the US. The per capita personal
income was $37,375 in 2008, ranked 26th in the U.S. and 13.2% of
the population is below the poverty line. As of November 2008,
South Dakota's
unemployment rate
was 3.4%, the third lowest jobless rate in the nation.
The
service industry is the largest
economic contributor in South Dakota. This sector includes the
retail,
finance, and
health care industries.
Citibank, which was the largest bank holding
company in the United States at one time, established national
banking operations in South Dakota in 1981 to take advantage of
favorable banking regulations. Government spending is another
important segment of the state's economy, providing over ten
percent of the gross state product.
Ellsworth Air Force Base
, near Rapid City, is the second-largest single
employer in the state.
Agriculture has historically been a key
component of the South Dakota economy. Although other industries
have expanded rapidly in recent decades, agricultural production is
still very important to the state's economy, especially in rural
areas. The five most valuable agricultural products in South Dakota
are
cattle,
corn ,
soybeans,
wheat, and
hogs. Agriculture-related industries such as
meat packing and
ethanol production also have a considerable economic
impact on the state. South Dakota is the sixth leading
ethanol-producing state in the nation.
Another important sector in South Dakota's economy is tourism.
Many
travel to view the attractions of the state, particularly those in
the Black Hills region, such as historic Deadwood
, Mount
Rushmore
, and the
nearby state and national parks. One of the largest tourist
events in the state is the annual
Sturgis Motorcycle Rally. The five
day event drew over 450,000 attendants in 2006, significant
considering the state has a population of only 790,000. In 2006,
tourism provided an estimated 33,000 jobs in the state and
contributed over two billion dollars to the economy of South
Dakota.
State taxes
As of 2005, South Dakota has the lowest per capita total state tax
rate in the United States. The state does not levy personal or
corporate
income taxes,
inheritance taxes, or taxes on
intangible personal property. The state
sales tax rate is 4 percent. Various
localities have local levies so that in some areas the rate is 6
percent. The state sales tax does not apply to sales to
Indians on
Indian Reservations, but many
reservations have a compact with the state. Businesses on the
reservation collect the tax and the state refunds to the Indian
Tribes the percentage of sales tax collections relating to the
ratio of Indian population to total population in the county or
area affected.
Ad valorem property taxes are local taxes and are a large
source of funding for school systems, counties, municipalities and
other local government units. The
South Dakota Special Tax
Division regulates some taxes including cigarette and alcohol
related taxes.
Transportation
South Dakota has a total of 83,609 miles of highways, roads,
and streets, along with 679 miles of
interstate highways. Two major
interstates pass through South Dakota:
Interstate 90, which runs east
and west; and
Interstate
29, running north and south in the eastern portion of the
state. The I-29 corridor features generally higher rates of
population and economic growth than areas in eastern South Dakota
that are further from the interstate. Also located in the state are
the shorter interstates
190, a
spur into central Rapid City, and
229, a
loop around eastern and southern Sioux Falls.
Several major
U.S. highways pass
through the state. U.S. routes
12,
14,
16,
18, and
212 travel east and west, while U.S. routes
81,
83,
85 and
281 run north and south.
South Dakota contains two
National
Scenic Byways. The
Peter
Norbeck National Scenic Byway is located in the Black Hills,
while the Native American Scenic Byway runs along the Missouri
River in the north-central part of the state. Other scenic byways
include the Badlands Loop Scenic Byway, the Spearfish Canyon Scenic
Byway, and the Wildlife Loop Road Scenic Byway.
Railroads have played an important role in South Dakota
transportation since the mid-19th century. Some of railroad track
were built in South Dakota during the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, but only are active.
BNSF Railway is currently the largest railroad
in South Dakota; the
Dakota, Minnesota, and
Eastern Railroad is the state's other major carrier. Rail
transportation in the state is confined only to freight, however,
as South Dakota is one of the few states without any
Amtrak service.
South
Dakota's largest commercial airports in terms of passenger traffic
are the Sioux Falls Regional Airport
and Rapid City Regional Airport
. Northwest Airlines, Frontier Airlines, and
Allegiant Airlines, as well as commuter airlines using the brand
affiliation with major airlines serve the two largest airports.
Several other cities in the state also have commercial air service,
some of which is subsidized by the
Essential Air Service program.
Government and politics
Government
Like that of other U.S. states, the structure of the government of
South Dakota follows the same
separation of powers as
federal government,
with
executive,
legislative, and
judicial branches. The structure of the state
government is laid out in the
Constitution of South Dakota,
the highest law in the state. The constitution may be amended
either by a majority vote of both houses of the legislature, or by
voter initiative.
The
Governor of South
Dakota occupies the executive branch of the state government.
The current governor is
M.
Michael Rounds, a Republican from
Pierre. The state constitution gives the governor the power to
either sign into law or veto bills passed by the state legislature,
to serve as commander-in-chief of the
South Dakota National Guard, to
appoint a
cabinet, and to
commute criminal sentences or to pardon those convicted of crimes.
The governor serves for a four-year term, and may not serve more
than two consecutive terms.
The state legislature is made up of two bodies, the
Senate, which has 35 members, and
the
House of
Representatives, with 70 members. South Dakota is divided into
35 legislative districts, with voters electing two representatives
and one senator per district. The legislature meets for an annual
session which begins on the second Tuesday in January and lasts for
30 days; it also meets if a special session is called by the
governor.
The judicial branch is made up of several levels. The
state supreme court, with four
justices and a chief justice, is the highest court in the state.
Below the supreme court are the circuit courts; 38 circuit judges
serve in seven judicial circuits in the state. Below the circuit
courts are the
magistrate
courts, which deal with more minor criminal and civil
actions.
Federal representation
South Dakota is represented at the federal level by
Senator Tim Johnson, Senator
John Thune, and
Representative
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin.
Johnson and Herseth Sandlin are Democrats and Thune is a
Republican. South Dakota is one of seven states with only one seat
in the US House of Representatives.
In US presidential elections, South Dakota is allotted three votes
in the
electoral
college, out of a total of 538. Like most states, South
Dakota's electoral votes are granted in a winner-take-all
system.
Politics
Presidential elections results
| Year |
Republican |
Democratic |
| 2008 |
54.30%
203,019 |
45.70% 170,886 |
| 2004 |
59.91%
232,584 |
38.44% 149,244 |
| 2000 |
60.3%
190,700 |
37.56% 118,804 |
| 1996 |
46.49%
150,543 |
43.03% 139,333 |
| 1992 |
40.66%
136,718 |
37.14% 124,888 |
| 1988 |
52.85%
165,415 |
46.51% 145,560 |
| 1984 |
63.0%
200,267 |
36.53% 116,113 |
|
South Dakota politics are generally dominated by the
Republican Party, and the
state has not supported a
Democratic presidential
candidate since 1964 — even
George
McGovern, the Democratic nominee in 1972 and himself a South
Dakotan, did not carry the state. Additionally, a Democrat has not
won the governorship since 1978. As of 2006, Republicans hold a 10%
voter registration advantage over Democrats and hold majorities in
both the state House of Representatives and Senate.
Despite
the state's general Republican and conservative leanings, Democrats
have found success in various state-wide elections, most notably in
those involving South Dakota's congressional representatives in
Washington
. Two of the three current members of the
state's congressional delegation are Democrats, and until his
electoral defeat in 2004 Senator
Tom
Daschle was the Senate
minority
leader (and briefly its
majority
leader during Democratic control of the Senate in
2001–02).
Contemporary political issues in South Dakota include the costs and
benefits of the
state lottery,
South Dakota's relatively low rankings in education spending
(particularly teacher pay), and recent legislative and electoral
attempts to ban
abortion in the
state.
Culture
Much of South Dakota's culture reflects the state's American
Indian, rural, Western, and European roots.
A number of annual
events celebrating the state's ethnic and historical heritage take
place around the state, such as Days of '76 in Deadwood
, Czech Days in Tabor
, and the annual St. Patrick's Day and Cinco de Mayo
festivities in Sioux Falls. Many pow wows are
held yearly throughout the state, and Custer State Park's
Buffalo Roundup, in which volunteers on horseback
gather the park's herd of around 1,500 bison, is a popular annual
event.
Laura Ingalls Wilder, whose
semi-autobiographical books center around her experiences as a
child and young adult on the frontier, is one of South Dakota's
best-known writers.
She used her experiences growing up on a
homestead near De Smet
as the basis for four of her novels: By the Shores of Silver
Lake, The Long
Winter, Little
Town on the Prairie, and The First Four
Years. Another literary figure from the state is
Black Elk, whose narration of the
Indian Wars and
Ghost
Dance movement and thoughts on Native American religion forms
the basis of the book
Black Elk
Speaks.
South Dakota has also produced several notable artists.
Harvey Dunn grew up on a homestead near Manchester
in the late 19th century. While most of his
career was spent as an illustrator, Dunn's most famous works,
showing various scenes of frontier life, were completed near the
end of his career.
Oscar Howe was born on
the
Crow Creek Indian
Reservation and won fame for his watercolor paintings. Howe was
one of the first Native American painters to produce works heavily
influenced by
abstraction, as opposed to
ones relying on more traditional styles.
Terry Redlin, originally from Watertown
, is an accomplished painter of rural and wildlife
scenes. Many of Redlin's works are on display at the
Redlin Art
Center
in Watertown. The award-winning children's
book author and illustrator
Paul Goble
has been based in the Black Hills since 1977.
Cities and towns

Sioux Falls

Aberdeen
Sioux
Falls
is the largest city in South Dakota, with an
estimated 2007 population of 151,505, and a metropolitan area
population of 227,171. The city, founded in 1856, is located
in the southeast corner of the state. Retail and financial services
have assumed greater importance in Sioux Falls, where the economy
was originally centered on agri-business and quarrying.
Rapid
City
, with a 2007 estimated population of 63,997, and a
metropolitan area population of 120,279, is the second-largest city
in the state. It is located on the eastern edge of the Black
Hills, and was founded in 1876.
Rapid City's economy is largely based on
tourism and defense spending, because of the close proximity of
many tourist attractions in the Black Hills
and Ellsworth Air Force Base
.
Aberdeen
, is the 3rd largest city in South Dakota, with
an estimated population of 24,410, and a micropolitan area
population of 39,827. Located in the northeast corner of the
state, it was founded in 1881 during the expansion of the
Milwaukee Railroad.
The next
seven largest cities in the state, in order of descending 2007
population, are Watertown
(20,530), Brookings
(19,463), Mitchell
(14,832), Pierre
(14,032), Yankton
(13,643), Huron
(10,902), and Vermillion
(10,251). Pierre is the state capital,
and Brookings and Vermillion are the locations of the state's two
largest universities. Of the ten largest cities in the state, only
Rapid City is located west of the Missouri River.
Media
South
Dakota's first newspaper, the Dakota Democrat, began
publishing in Yankton
in 1858. Today, the largest newspaper in the
state is the Sioux Falls
Argus
Leader, with a Sunday circulation of 63,701 and a weekday
circulation of 44,334. The
Rapid
City Journal, with a Sunday circulation of 32,638 and a
weekday circulation of 27,827, is South Dakota's second largest
newspaper.
The next four largest newspapers in the
state are the Aberdeen
American
News, the Watertown Public Opinion, the
Huron Plainsman, and the
Brookings
Register. In 1981,
Tim
Giago founded the
Lakota Times as a newspaper for the
local American Indian community on the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
The
newspaper, now published in New York
and known as Indian Country Today, is currently
available in every state in the country.
There are currently nine television stations broadcasting in South
Dakota;
South Dakota
Public Television broadcasts from a number of locations around
the state, while the other stations broadcast from either Sioux
Falls or Rapid City. The two largest television
media markets in South Dakota are Sioux
Falls-Mitchell, with a viewership of 246,020, and Rapid City, with
a viewership of 91,070. The two markets rank as 114th and 177th
largest in the United States, respectively.
The first television
station in the state, KELO-TV
, began airing in Sioux Falls in 1953. Among
KELO's early programs was
Captain
11, an afternoon children's program.
Captain 11
ran from 1955 until 1996, making it the longest continuously
running children's television program in the nation.
A number of South Dakotans are famous for their work in the fields
of television and publishing.
Former NBC Nightly News anchor and author Tom Brokaw is from Webster
and Yankton, USA
Today founder Al Neuharth is
from Eureka
and Alpena
, gameshow host Bob Barker
spent much of his childhood in Mission
, and entertainment news hosts Pat O'Brien and Mary Hart are both from Sioux
Falls.
Education
As of 2006, South Dakota has a total primary and secondary school
enrollment of 136,872, with 120,278 of these students being
educated in the public school system. There are 703 public schools
in 168 school districts, giving South Dakota the highest number of
schools per capita in the United States. The current high school
graduation rate is 89.9%, and the average
ACT score is 21.8, slightly above the
national average of 21.1. 84.6% of the adult population has earned
at least a high school diploma, and 21.5% has earned a
bachelor's degree or higher. South
Dakota's average public school teacher salary of $34,040, compared
to a national average of $47,674, is the lowest in the
nation.
The
South Dakota Board of
Regents, whose members are appointed by the governor, controls
the six public universities in the state.
South Dakota
State University
(SDSU), in Brookings
, is the largest university in the state, with
an enrollment of 11,377. The University of South Dakota (USD),
in Vermillion
, is the state's oldest university, and has the
only law and medical schools in the state. South Dakota also has
several private universities, the largest of which is Augustana
College
in Sioux Falls.
Sports and recreation
Organized sports
Because of its low population, South Dakota does not host any major
league professional sports franchises. The state does have a number
of minor league teams, all of which play in either Sioux Falls or
Rapid City. Sioux Falls is currently home to four teams: the
Sioux Falls Canaries (
baseball), the
Sioux Falls Skyforce (
basketball), the
Sioux Falls Stampede (
hockey), and the
Sioux
Falls Storm (
arena football).
The
Canaries play at Sioux Falls Stadium
, while the others play at the Sioux Falls
Arena
. Rapid City has a hockey team named the
Rapid City Rush.
The Rush recently
began their inaugural season at the Rushmore
Plaza Civic Center
.
Universities in South Dakota host a variety of sports programs. For
many years, South Dakota was one of the only states in the country
without a
NCAA Division
I football or basketball team. However, several years ago SDSU
decided to move their teams from
Division
II to Division I, a move that has since been followed by the
University of South
Dakota. Other universities in the state compete at the NCAA's
Division II or III levels, or in the
NAIA.
Famous South Dakota athletes include
Billy
Mills,
Mike Miller,
Mark Ellis,
Becky Hammon,
Brock
Lesnar, and
Adam Vinatieri.
Mills is
from the town of Pine Ridge
and competed at the 1964 Summer Olympic Games in
Tokyo, becoming the only American to win a gold medal in the 10,000
meter event. Mike
Miller of Mitchell
played at the University of Florida, leading
them to the 2000 NCAA Championship game his sophomore year and won
the 2001 NBA rookie of the year award. Mark Ellis of Rapid City played for
the University of Florida and is currently a second baseman for the
Oakland Athletics.
Becky Hammon of
Rapid
City
plays for the WNBA's San Antonio Silver Stars.
Lesner,
of Webster
, wrestled at the University of Minnesota and had a
106-5 career record; he is also the current heavy-weight champion
in the UFC. Vinatieri is an NFL placekicker who grew up in Rapid
City
and attended SDSU.
Recreation
Fishing and hunting are both popular outdoor activities in South
Dakota. Fishing contributes over $170 million to South Dakota's
economy, and hunting contributes over $190 million. In 2007, over
275,000 hunting licences and 175,000 fishing licences were sold in
the state; around half of the hunting licences and over two-thirds
of the fishing licences were purchased by South Dakotans.
Popular
species of game include pheasants,
white-tailed deer, mule deer, and turkeys
, as well as waterfowl such as Canada geese, snow
geese, and mallards. Targets of
anglers include
walleye in the eastern
glacial lakes and Missouri River reservoirs,
chinook salmon in
Lake
Oahe, and
trout in the Black Hills.
Other sports, such as cycling and running, are also popular in the
state. In 1991, the state opened the
George S. Mickelson Trail, a 114 mile
(183 km)
rail trail in the Black
Hills. Besides being popular with cyclists, the trail is also the
site of a portion of the annual Mount Rushmore marathon; all of the
marathon's course is at an elevation of over 4,000 feet
(1,200 m). Other events in the state include the Tour de Kota,
a 438 mile (704 km), six-day cycling event that covers
much of eastern and central South Dakota, and the annual Sturgis
Motorcycle Rally, which draws thousands of participants from around
the United States.
State symbols
Some of South Dakota's official state symbols include:
- State
bird: Ring-necked
Pheasant
- State
flower: American Pasque
flower
- State
tree: Black Hills Spruce
- State nicknames:
Mount
Rushmore
State
(official), Coyote state & Sunshine state (both unofficial)
- State
motto: "Under God, the people rule"
- State
slogan: "Great Faces. Great Places."
- State
mineral: Rose quartzite
- State
insect: Honey bee -
Apis mellifera L.
- State
animal: Coyote
- State
fish: Walleye
- State
gemstone: Fairburn
agate
- State
song: "Hail, South
Dakota!"
See also
References
- Hasselstrom, pp. 2-4.
- Census Regions and Divisions of the United States,
U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
- Johnson, Dirk. Gold Divides Dakotans as River Did
[1] The New York Times. October 9, 1988.
(accessed 2008-2-14)
- Schell, pp. 4-6.
- Schell, p. 6.
- Hetland, Cara. South Dakota bald eagles make a
comeback [2] Minnesota Public Radio. February 8,
2007. (accessed September 22, 2007).
- South Dakota Weather|South Dakota Weather For Travellers
and Residents
- Hetland, Cara. Crazy Horse Memorial turns 60 this year
[3] Minnesota Public Radio. June 8, 2008.
(accessed February 7, 2009).
- Schell, p. 15.
- Schell, pp. 16-18.
- Staff, Crow Creek Massacre, University of South Dakota
- Schell, pp. 28-29.
- Schell, pp. 18-21.
- Schell, pp. 72-73.
- Schell, p. 72.
- Schell, pp 168-170.
- Schell, p. 113.
- Schell, p. 129.
- Schell, pp. 140-144.
- Schell, pp. 361-362.
- Schell, pp. 317-320.
- Schell, pp. 323-325.
- Hetland, Cara. Sioux Falls 25 years after Citibank's
arrival. [4] Minnesota Public Radio. February 24,
2006. (accessed March 23, 2007)
- Hetland, Cara. South Dakota has nation's poorest
county. [5] Minnesota Public Radio. October 1,
2002. (accessed December 19, 2008)
- O'Driscoll, Patrick. Sioux Falls powers South Dakota
growth [6] USA
Today. March 12, 2001. (accessed December 16, 2008)
- http://www.bea.gov/regional/index.htm
-
http://www.bea.gov/regional/spi/drill.cfm?seltable=SA1-3&selLineCode=400&selYears=2008
&rformat=display&selSort=1
- Reha, Bob. South Dakota's Ellsworth AFB to stay open.
[7] Minnesota Public Radio. August 26,
2005. (accessed September 8, 2007)
- Rovner, Julie. South Dakotans Again Consider An Abortion
Ban [8] National Public Radio. October 27,
2008. (accessed August 13, 2009).
- Hasselstrom, pp. 34-36.
- Hasselstrom, pp. 215-217.
- Hasselstrom, p. 202.
- Sun, Rebecca. Catching up with Billy Mills [9] Sports Illustrated. July 28,
2008.
Bibliography
External links