111213_YKMV_A2.pdf










November 12, 2013 • Page 2
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Celebrating You and Me and South Dakota
cation." Milton
thought that the
prairie's isolation, or privacy,
helped to shape
Dakotans’ character, making us
"independent,
occasionally to
the point of
orneriness, but
it also makes us
aware of the
importance of
companionship,
of willingness to
help neighbors,
and so we are a
friendly people."
What is
a typical South
Dakotan? Can
we be categorized so easily?
The editor of
Yankee Magazine
was once asked
to describe the
typical Yankee
and he told a
story that goes
like this.
President Benjamin
Harrison declared South
Dakota a state 124 years
ago. Boundaries were
drawn. Politicians were
elected. But not much
changed except that the
inhabitants now had more
in common; they were
South Dakotans. They
came from a variety of
ethnicities and played a
Save Up To
multitude of roles in the
newly formed state. There
were riverboat captains,
fur traders, prostitutes,
politicians, farmers and
businessmen.
With such a diverse
population, how would
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course, place. The late
historian and writer John
R. Milton, who taught at
the University of South
Dakota for many years,
wrote in his book, South
Dakota; A History, "If people of differing beliefs,
nationality backgrounds,
and activities gather in a
place, it is possible that
the place becomes the key
to the people. So does the
particular time."
We share a vast grasslands prairie, the Black
Hills, nine Indian reservations, dramatic sunsets, a
sharp East/West River
divide and the wild
Missouri. We share badlands, glacial lakes, huge
mountain carvings and
extreme temperatures and
storms.
Milton believed South
Dakotans' cumulative
character has been
shaped by our closeness
to the land. "The earth,"
he wrote, "and our working of it, or on it, keeps us
basically primitive in spirit. This would mean our
values (at least many of
them) are fundamental,
and are less artificial or
faddish than some of
those values which are
associated with sophisti-
A Vermont fellow was
sitting on a park bench by
a fork in the road when a
family drove up and
stopped. The father rolled
down the car window and
asked, “Does it matter
which road we take to get
to the courthouse?”
The man on the park
bench, the typical Yankee,
replied, “Not to me.”
The Yankee editor
thought the joke illustrat-
ed the character of his
people. But if you change
the story and replace the
Yankee with a South
Dakotan on the park
bench it makes no sense.
A South Dakotan wouldn't
respond that way. He
would most likely get in
his own car and lead the
family to the courthouse.
Along with a unique,
shared place and similar
values, South Dakotans
also have 124 years of
shared history. My dad,
Bernie, started South
Dakota Magazine in 1985.
Each issue is filled with
stories of South Dakota's
people and places. He
says he didn't notice at
first (because he was too
busy selling ads and writing stories in order to pay
the bills) but those stories, as a whole, illustrate
who we are as a people.
"Reading your magazine
should be like seeing your
reflection in the lake," he
once wrote. "The man in
the water grins and you
grin. He squirms and so
do you. He grows sad and
you know why."
Our birthday year,
which has just begun, will
present many opportunities to celebrate our
shared history and culture. Visit www.125sd.gov
to learn about festivities
in your area. And as you
attend one, remember it is
a celebration of you and
me, and of our common
reflection in the water.
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Katie Hunhoff is the editor
of South Dakota Magazine,
a bi-monthly publication
celebrating the people and
culture of our state. Visit
www.SouthDakotaMagazine.com
for more information.
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