Timeline of South Dakota

This timeline of South Dakota is a list of events in the history of South Dakota by year.

First people

Arikara man, wearing a bearskin, 1908

1500s

1600s

1670-1707

  • South Dakota land is part of the English territory of Rupert's Land.

1683

1699-1764

  • South Dakota land is part of the French colony of La Louisiane.

1700s

1700

1743

1745

1750

1762

  • The Treaty of Fontainebleau cedes the French colony of La Louisiane, including South Dakota land, to Spain.

1764-1803

1775

1780

  • Yankton and Yanktonais Sioux, about this date, having been driven from western Iowa by Ottos, came up and settled in James River valley.

1785

  • Pierre Dorion, afterward guide to Lewis and Clark, married a Yankton woman and settled in trade at mouth of James River.

1790

  • Pierre Garreau settled with Rees at mouth of Grand River.

1792

  • Sioux finally conquer Rees and drive them from their strong position in neighborhood of Pierre. The Rees retreat up river and settle with relatives at mouth of Grand River.

1796

  • Loisel, or L'Oiselle, builds post on Cedar Island, between Pierre and Big Bend. First recorded post in South Dakota.

1797

1800s

1800

1803

1804

1805

  • Pierre Dorion conducts party of Sioux chiefs to St. Louis.
  • Territory of Louisiana, 1805–1812

1806

  • Lewis and Clark return from Pacific passing through South Dakota.

1807

Manuel Lisa
  • Manuel Lisa undertakes trade with Indians at head of Missouri. Sergeant Nathaniel Pryor attempts to conduct Big White, a Mandan chief who visited Washington with Lewis and Clark, to his home and is attacked and driven back by Rees, assisted by Minneconjou Teton Sioux under Black Buffalo. Four whites killed, nine wounded.

1808

1809

  • Manuel Lisa, for St Louis Missouri Fur Company, safely conducts Big White to his home in North Dakota. Finds Rees friendly.

1810

  • Loisel post burned with large stock of furs.

1811

  • Astorian party go up Missouri to Grand River where they buy horses of Rees and go thence up Grand River toward Pacific. First recorded exploration of northern Black Hills region.
  • Manuel Lisa finds Sioux excited over "Prophet craze" and believes it due to hostile English influence. Reports condition to General Clark, Indian agent.

1812

  • Red Thunder, Flathead Yanktonais chief from Elm River, Brown County, with son, Waneta, and twenty-two Sissetons enlist to serve English in war against Americans.
  • Territory of Missouri, 1812–1821.

1813

  • Manuel Lisa made subagent for Missouri River Sioux and keeps them friendly to American interests.

1815

  • Teton Sioux sign treaty of friendship at Portage des Sioux. Black Buffalo dies there July 14. Given military funeral.

1816

  • Pawnee House burns.

1817

  • Fur trade revives. Joseph La Framboise builds Fort Teton at site of Fort Pierre. First continuous settlement.

1818

  • Anglo-American Convention.

1822

  • La Framboise builds trading post at Great Bend of Big Sioux (Flandreau).
  • Fort Tecumseh built at site of Fort Pierre by Columbia Fur Company.
  • Fort Recovery built upon American Island at Chamberlain by Missouri Fur Company. (It is possible this post was built ten years earlier to compensate loss of Loisel post, and was headquarters of Manuel Lisa during War of 1812-1815.)

1823

  • General Ashley, lieutenant governor of Missouri, en route to Yellowstone, with cargo of goods and one hundred men, attacked by Rees at Grand River and thirteen men killed and ten severely wounded.
  • Colonel Henry Leavenworth, with 220 men, marches from Fort Atkinson, near Omaha, to punish Rees for attack on Atkinson. At Yankton, July 3, Sergeant Samuel Stackpole and six men drowned by overturning of boat. Leavenworth is joined by Joshua Pilcher, manager of Missouri Fur Company, with forty volunteers at Fort Recovery. General Ashley and eighty men join party at Cheyenne River. Seven hundred and fifty Sioux Indians volunteer for the campaign. August 9 Ree towns reached and besieged. Rees punished and beg for terms. First general military movement in Dakota.

1825

  • General Henry Atkinson and Dr. Benjamin O'Fallon sent up Missouri with an escort of 476 men to make treaties for trade and intercourse with Indian tribes. Very successful. Destroy English influence with Indians. First Fourth of July celebration in Dakota.
  • Wamdesapa, a Wakpekuta chief, kills his brother Tasagi and is driven from his tribe. Settles on Vermilion River in South Dakota.

1828

1831

  • Pierre Chouteau, Jr., navigates first steamboat, the Yellowstone, on upper Missouri, reaching Fort Tecumseh. Revolutionizes fur trade methods.

1832

  • Fort Pierre built to succeed Fort Tecumseh.
  • George Catlin, famous painter of Indian pictures, visits Fort Pierre and paints many likenesses.
  • Frederick Le Beau, a trader, kills Francois Querrel, an employee, at mouth of Cherry Creek, on Cheyenne River. Le Beau arrested by order of William Laidlaw, burgeois of Fort Pierre, and sent to St. Louis in chains.

1837

1838

1839

  • Nicollet and Fremont again visit South Dakota, coming up the river to Fort Pierre, thence passing over to James River, and finally to the Minnesota.
  • Father Pierre John De Smet visits the renegade band of Wakpekuta Sioux under Wamdesapa, to try to effect a peace between them and the Potawatomies of central Iowa.

1840

  • Dr. Stephen R. Riggs, celebrated missionary from Minnesota River, visits Fort Pierre and preaches first Christian sermon in Dakota.

1842

  • Audubon, the naturalist, visited the section upon a professional trip and observed and noted most of the birds and animals.
  • Father Alexander Ravoux visits Fort Pierre and baptizes many Indians.

1845

  • Father Ravoux visits Fort Vermilion.

1847

  • Mrs. Joseph La Barge comes to Fort Pierre, with her husband, Captain La Barge of the steamboat Martha. First white woman to visit South Dakota. The Martha attacked by Yankton Indians at Crow Creek.

1849

  • Inkpaduta, son of the renegade Wamdesapa, massacres his cousin Wamundiyakapi and seventeen other Wakpekutas.

1851

1855

1856

1857

  • Settlement begun at Sioux Falls, Flandreau, and Medary. "The Noble Road" built across the state from Lake Benton to Crow Creek.
  • Fort Randall completed and occupied.
  • Inkpaduta, the renegade, massacres forty-two settlers at Spirit Lake, Iowa, and retreats into South Dakota with three white women captives.

1858

  • Yankton Sioux make treaty relinquishing title to lands between Big Sioux and Missouri. Yankton Indian Reservation established.[4] This was the second treaty with the Sioux within seven years to open land to Euro-American settlement, and the land became known as the Yankton Triangle.[2]
  • Mrs. Goodwin, first white woman settler, arrives at Sioux Falls.
  • Settlement at Medary destroyed by Smutty Bear, Yankton Sioux.
  • Settlers at Sioux Falls build and fortify Fort Sod.
  • Provisional government organized. Legislature elected and convened. Alpheus G. Fuller sent as delegate to Congress. Henry Masters, governor.

1859

  • Yankton treaty ratified. July 10 Indians surrender lands. Yankton, Vermilion, and Bon Homme founded.
  • Dakota Democrat newspaper established by Samuel J. Albright. Governor Masters dies. New legislature elected at Sioux Falls. Jefferson P. Kidder elected delegate to Congress. Wilmot W. Brookings provisional governor.

1860

  • First church society organized at Vermilion by Presbyterians.
  • First school opened at Vermilion.
  • First schoolhouse built at Bon Homme.
  • Non-Native population was approximately 1100 people, mostly in trading posts or military garrisons along the rivers.[2]

1861

  • Dakota Territory erected by Congress March 2. Dr. William Jayne appointed governor. Establishes temporary capital at Yankton. Calls election for legislature and delegate to Congress. John B.S. Todd elected delegate.
  • Dakota in the American Civil War

1862

  • First territorial legislature, the "Pony Congress", meets March 17. They chartered the Missouri and Niobrara Valley Railroad Company, a planned but never completed railway.[2]
  • Company A, Dakota cavalry, organized at Yankton.
  • Great Indian Outbreak in Minnesota, August 18. The Amidons massacred at Sioux Falls. Settlers flee in wild panic. Stockade at Yankton. All men called to arms.
  • Crow Creek Reservation established.
  • The Homestead Act of 1862 provides ownership of South Dakota land to people who farm it for several years.

1863

  • Governor Jayne goes to Congress. Newton Edmunds appointed governor. Company B, Dakota cavalry, organized at Elkpoint.

1864

1865

  • War of Outbreak ended by treaty at Fort Pierre. Montana road ordered built.

1866

1868

1869

  • Faulk succeeded by John A. Burbank. "Wild and woolly period." Great factional Moody-Brookings fight begins.[5]

1870

  • Population of Dakota Territory below the 46th parallel north (the modern extent of South Dakota) is 11,776 and growing.[2]

1872

  • First railroad in South Dakota; Dakota Southern built from Sioux City to Yankton.

1873

  • A land-grant railroad from New Ulm, Minnesota, to Lake Kampeska near Watertown is finished. Named the Winona & St. Peter Railroad, this subsidiary of the Chicago and North Western built about 34.5 miles (55.5 km) of track in Dakota Territory. But lack of population meant that trains only ran to Gary on the Minnesota-Dakota border until population increase after 1878.[2]
  • Gen. Edwin S. McCook, secretary of Dakota Territory, shot and killed by Peter P. Wintermute, result of factional political fight.

1874

  • Burbank succeeded by John L. Pennington.
  • Gold discovered in Black Hills. General Custer's expedition to the Black Hills.
  • Second invasion of grasshoppers.

1875

Miners in the Black Hills

1876

  • Gold discovered in Deadwood Gulch. Stampede from Custer. Miners establish law and order. The Homestake deposit is discovered in Lead; it becomes the largest and deepest gold mine in North America.
  • Great Sioux war. Battles of Rosebud and Little Big Horn. Custer's army destroyed.
  • Black Hills War, 1876–1877
  • Black Hills relinquished by Indians. All agency Sioux dismounted and disarmed.

1877

  • Great Dakota boom begins.

1878

  • William A. Howard succeeds Pennington.

1879

  • Great boom waxes strong. Railroad building begins.

1880

1881

1882

1883

1884

1885

  • Second Sioux Falls constitutional convention. State officers and United States senators elected. Huron temporary capital.
  • Spearfish Normal organized.
  • Dakota Wesleyan University established at Mitchell.

1887

1889

1890

Sitting Bull, a Hunkpapa Lakota leader, was one of the principal Sioux leaders.
View of canyon at Wounded Knee, dead horses and Lakota bodies are visible.

1891

  • Good conditions restored.

1895

  • Walter W. Taylor, state treasurer, defaults for $367,000, and absconds. Returned and is convicted.
  • Period of great depression and hard times.

1896

  • The tide turns. Beginning of long period of prosperity.

1897

  • Springfield Normal presented to the state to be a public educational institution[6]

1898

  • Spanish War. First South Dakota Infantry sent to Philippines. Distinguished service there.

1899

  • First South Dakota Infantry returns from Philippines crowned with glory. President McKinley welcomes the regiment home.

1900s

1901

1903

1904

  • Opening of portion of Rosebud land brings unprecedented rush of homesteaders. One hundred and six thousand persons apply for right to enter lands.
  • Mitchell contests with Pierre for state capital. Pierre for third time successful.

1905

1924

1927

Construction of the Mount Rushmore monument

1933

1934

Dust Storms, "One of South Dakota's Black Blizzards, 1934"

1935

1936

Dust Bowl - Dallas, South Dakota 1936

1938

1946

1948

Oahe Dam from the International Space Station
Crazy Horse Memorial in 2010

1952

Late 1950s

1959

1961

  • Interstate 29 extends into South Dakota from Iowa. The interstate highway is connected to Fargo during the 1960s.

1972

Cars jumbled together by the flood.

1973

  • Between February 27 and May 8, 200 Oglala Lakota and followers of the American Indian Movement occupy Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

1978

1980

  • Significant abandonment of unprofitable rail lines in the state occurs.[9]

1981

  • Citibank moves its credit card operations from New York City to Sioux Falls, leading to significant expansion of the financial industry in the state.[10]

1988

2000s

2002

  • The Homestake Gold Mine ceases operations.

2012

2013

gollark: You're essentially causing those consequences for no particular reason.
gollark: Besides, telling people "just never have sex if you are worried about having children" does not seem to actually work.
gollark: If you ban (most) abortion you're just creating that risk entirely artificially.
gollark: (or a big fraction, I guess)
gollark: Do you think that everyone who accidentally has children just doesn't know that they might accidentally have children?

See also

References

This article incorporates public domain text: Robinson, Doane (1905). A Brief History of South Dakota. American Book Company. pp. 215–221.

  1. "South Dakota State Historical Society". history.sd.gov. Retrieved 2018-06-25.
  2. Hufstetler, Mark; Bedeau, Michael (1998). South Dakota’s Railroads: An Historic Context (PDF). South Dakota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  3. "Fort Randall". National Park Service. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  4. Robinson, Doane (1902). South Dakota Historical Collections. South Dakota State Historical Society. p. 116. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
  5. Robinson, Doane (1904). History of South Dakota. B. F. Bowen. p. 250. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  6. Springfield, South Dakota, Centennial. Springfield Times. 1970.
  7. South Dakota Department of Highways (1958). Annual Report to the Governor. p. 6. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  8. Teller, Janet. "USGS Fact Sheet 037-02: The 1972 Black Hills-Rapid City Flood Revisited". pubs.usgs.gov. Retrieved 2015-05-20.
  9. "South Dakota Department of Transportation - Current Rail System". South Dakota Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  10. Whitney, Stu (April 7, 2015). "What really happened to land Citibank". Argus Leader. Retrieved May 21, 2015.
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