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Most people have at least a few old photos but for some, collecting historical images is a passion.
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A horse was the only survivor on Custer's side of the famed “last stand“ at the Battle of the Little Bighorn/Greasy Grass.
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This 30-minute documentary looks at the founding of South Dakota's State Park system and outlines some of the major milestones in the past 100 years.
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There are South Dakota connections to the “Buffalo Nickel“ and other U.S. coins featuring images of Native Americans.
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The Civilian Conservation Corps established 50 work camps in South Dakota during the 1930s - many of them in the Black Hills
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The western South Dakota county boasts some 50 sites on the National Register of Historic Places.
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After his death at the Little Big Horn, George Armstrong Custer's wife spent 57 years writing and speaking throughout the country, clearing away any criticism people and historians
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Some of the last wolves to roam freely in South Dakota were notorious for their aggressiveness and cunning.
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Photographer William H. Illingworth documented Custer's historic 1874 foray into the Black Hills.