South Dakota
A
Great Plains state, South Dakota was named for the Dakota division
of the Sioux Indians, and is known as the Coyote State. Admitted
simultaneously with North Dakota after the Dakota Territory was
divided along the 46th parallel, South Dakota is mainly a rural
state.
Today, just less than 10 percent of its population
is American Indian. South Dakota is known for two monumental
sculptures carved into the Black Hills--Mount Rushmore, which honors
presidents Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt,
and the Crazy Horse Monument, still under construction, which honors
the Oglala Sioux war chief.
The state flower is the pasqueflower, also called
the May Day flower; its blooming is one of the first signs of spring
in South Dakota.
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Teddy Bears Picnics
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