New Dating Site De Smet Sd

broken image


  1. Someone You can Love is Nearby. Browse Profiles & Photos of Singles in De Smet, SD! Join Match.com, the leader in online dating with more dates, more relationships and more marriages than any other dating site.
  2. NAIC. Name City State Phone; 67989: American Memorial Life Insurance Company: Rapid City: SD: 605.719.0999: 95839: Avera Health Plans, Inc. Sioux Falls: SDF: 605.322.4550.

De Smet Cemetary. The De Smet Cemetery is located southwest of De Smet on a beautiful hilltop with many trees overlooking the city as well as a view of the site of the Charles 'Pa' Ingalls homestead and the 'big slough' to the east. Each year hundreds of visitors view the. Dating Service in De Smet on YP.com. See reviews, photos, directions, phone numbers and more for the best Dating Service in De Smet, SD.

New Dating Site De Smet Sd Memory Card

Welcome to Laura's Little Town! Learn, play, and make memories with your family. From Ingalls family home tours to our historic main street, covered wagon rides to outdoor theater, De Smet offers a great opportunity to explore our pioneer heritage. We are proud to share it with your family.

Laura Ingalls Wilder's books capture the founding of De Smet and her family was De Smet's first residents. Laura grew up on her family's homestead, attended school in De Smet's first school, worked her first job on our main street, went courting with Almanzo across the prairie, and started her own family here in De Smet. She carried these memories throughout her life.

For more information about what to see and do in De Smet, contact us.

You can stay right in De Smet at our B&Bs, motels or campgrounds.

Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society » Discover Laura!

Journey into Laura's life and history with a visit to the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society. Join our costumed guides and stop into the railroad surveyors's shanty where Laura and her family spend their first Dakota winter in 1879.

The Memorial Society preserves and presents the largest collection of Ingalls family memorabilia, with over 2000 original artifacts. Children are invited to try an old fashioned sewing machine, dress like a pioneer and learn how to read Braille at the Discovery Center. For more than fifty years, visitors from around the world have been drawn to this fascinating look into the lives of Laura and her family. This is a must see for all Laura fans.

Ingalls Homestead »Laura's Living Prairie

Living History. Covered Wagon Camping. Fresh Air. Wide-open Prairies. Experience our pioneer heritage on the quarter-section of land Charles Ingalls earned through the Homestead Act.

Drive a covered wagon, attend a one-room schoolhouse, twist hay, grind wheat, make rope, wash clothes, experience the homesteading history that shaped our nation. Lured by the prospect of free land from the Homestead Act of 1862, the Ingalls family, just like thousands of other pioneers flocked to the midwest to take Uncle Sam up on his bet - that they could turn 160 acres of prairie into a family farm.

Today native prairie grasses cover over one hundred acres, period buildings house exhibits that share homestead life, and hands-on activities allow families to understand the changes in our agricultural heritage. Our friendly staff invites you to spend an old-fashioned family day at Ingalls Homestead.

Camp on Laura's open prairie in a covered wagon, bunkhouse, RV and tents.

Open every day, including holidays, Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day. Contact us for spring and autumn hours.

To contact us, call 800-776-3594 or email here.

Laura Ingalls Wilder Pageant »Theater on the Prairie

Site

50th Anniversary! 2021 Performance-- July 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25

Each summer since 1971, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Pageant has welcomed visitors from around the world to watch Laura Ingalls Wilder's books come to life on the outdoor stage. Just across the road from Charles Ingalls's homestead land, overlooking cottonwoods he planted and the Big Slough, visitors watch the sunset during the show.

Entertainment and wagon rides available prior to the show. Concessions, gift shop, and restrooms on-site.

Gates open at 6:00 PM; show begins at 8:00 PM. Seating provided, lawn chairs are welcome.

Come early...There are free wagon rides for the entire family and photo opportunities. Advance purchase of tickets is not necessary because there is plenty of seating and parking. All seating is general admission.
For more information, email or call 800-776-3594 or 800-880-3383


The Loftus Store »

Laura wrote of Mr. Loftus and the Loftus store in several of her 'Little House' books.
Daniel Loftus came to De Smet in late 1879 and established the Loftus Store, a general merchandise store that he ran successfully until his death 43 years later. Through his time as owner, Mr. Loftus featured the finest of goods on his shelves, and the store became known as 'The Quality Store.' The Loftus Store became the town's social center: men would play checkers, share the latest area news and discuss crucial information such as when the train would arrive carrying much needed food for the winter.

The original Loftus Store still stands on main street (Calumet Ave.) and displays memorabilia from times of yore. All are welcome to come on in and live the history.

Silver Lake & Walking Trail

Silver Lake, a pothole lake formed by the melting glaciers, was the site of the railroad camp and the Surveyor's Shanty. The Ingalls lived in the Shanty when they first came to De Smet. The lake, which is modest in size, is often inquired about by many of De
Smet's visitors. The lake is located just east of the city.

Phase one of a Walking Trail to Silver Lake was completed in 2008. It provides a short concrete path to the Silver lake area. Enjoy an easy walk back in history with an excellent opportunity for wildlife viewing.

Wilder Welcome Center & Prairie Bus Tours

Located on the site of Fuller's Hardware Store across the street from where the Ingalls family spent the Long Winter, the Wilder Welcome Center is here to answer your questions and help you discover what to see and do in De Smet. In-depth bus tours, offered daily in the summer, get visitors into the countryside to see Laura's beloved prairie. Little House fans get a chance to see Silver Lake, the Big Slough, Lake Henry, the De Smet Cemetery, and Almanzo's homestead and tree claim sites.

Gifts and art form local artisans and Laura-loving artisans from around the country available. Restrooms and a comfy place to sit and rest for a moment are available for all visitors.

For more information, call us at 605-854-3123 or email us.

Depot Museum / Harvey Dunn School

Take a step back in time to the early days of De Smet area residents. The current depot was built in 1906 after a fire on April 23, 1905 destroyed the original one. Pa Ingalls served at the first depot in De Smet. Today visitors can see original lights, windows and fixtures are still in the depot over one hundred years later. The brick walkway on the west of the depot ground was laid by the Chicago Northwestern Railroad Company in 1906.

The museum is home to local and regional artifacts. The artifacts include everything from vintage clothing, a pot-bellied stove, an ornate organ, children's toys, and military artifacts. The museum is also home to a wildlife display that includes native birds and animals.

The Depot Museum is open June, July and August. It is local volunteers. For more information or to volunteer, please call Charmeine Bohn 854-3809 or Helen Gehm at 854-3274.

De Smet Cemetary

The De Smet Cemetery is located southwest of De Smet on a beautiful hilltop with many trees overlooking the city as well as a view of the site of the Charles 'Pa' Ingalls homestead and the 'big slough' to the east. Each year hundreds of visitors view the
grave sites of several of the Ingalls family, including Charles, Caroline, Mary, Carrie, Grace and infant son of Laura and Almanzo Wilder. Familiar names from the Little House of the Prairie television series and from Laura's books are also found on many of the gravestones.

Even though the original ten acres of land for the Cemetery was purchased and the Cemetery Association was incorporated in 1881 when it was still Dakota Territory, there are headstones dating back to 1880. A WPA project graveled the roadways and alleys around each block and a mausoleum was erected in 1978. Of the over 2,100 grave sites, there are veterans with service dating back to 1889; among them being men from the distinguished Company 'E' serving in the Spanish American War in 1898. The St. Thomas Catholic Cemetery lies adjacent to the east of the original.

Couse Opera House

New Dating Site De Smet Sd South Dakota

De Smet once had a flourishing opera house. The closest you can come now is when you visit Ward's Bakery. Ward's is a great place for lunch or breakfast and is located across the street from what was once 'Pa' Ingalls' store. Ward's owner, Patti Ward Slater, has converted it to her family living quarters, but she has retained many of the best architectural features of the old theater. Visitors are impressed by the beauty of the place.

The building now housing Ward's Restaurant and Bakery was Edward H. Couse's hardware store when Laura Ingalls Wilder lived in De Smet. In those days, the town had no place for meetings or public entertainment.

The local citizens wanted a place to host traveling theatrical shows and hold suppers, dances and other events. In 1886, Mr. Couse replaced his frame hardware store with a magnificient two- story brick 44 foot front building. He had the second floor fitted out as an opera house and decided on a unique way to dedicate the new facility. He offered a free kitchen stove and cooking utensils to the first couple willing to be married in the new theater. Of course, he had plenty of volunteers. The event was a success and over the next three decades, the opera house was the prime spot for not only entertainment such as minstrel shows, musicals and vaudeville acyts, but it also provided a place for local social events. In renovating the old theater as her home, Patti Ward Slater has managed to retain most of the architectural features of the grand old theater.
-American Roads Travel Magazine

*Photos courtesy of South Dakota Tourism

In my younger years—with no husband in sight—I joked that whomever I married must be willing to take a honeymoon trip to all of the Little House sites. When I did find my own 'beau,' he was, ironically, a farmer—quite a foreigner to this suburban Boston girl. Although love was the catalyst for relocating from my longtime New England home to the High Plains of western Kansas, I discovered a bonus beyond that: I was now in close proximity to the Little House sites.

And I was going to see them.

From my first sight of the sign lettered 'Verdigris River,' I learned to recognize 'Little House chills.' Over the next fifteen years, they would consume me time and again… standing on the rolling hills of Pa's homestead claim in South Dakota … marveling at the countertops Almanzo customized for his petite (exactly my height!) bride in Missouri… standing in the cool water of Plum Creek, still perfect for wading on a Minnesota summer day. For Little House fans, there is absolutely nothing like seeing Laura Ingalls Wilder's world come to life.

Now with three children, I've traveled to the Little House homesites more times than I can count. I've waded with them in Plum Creek. I've held out my hands to receive the gift of a handful of pebbles on the shore of Lake Pepin. Along the way, I've learned a thing or two about making the most of the trips. Travelers — especially families — need advice, so to answer the call I've created a series of travel guides to the Little House sites, LAND OF LAURA. The first guide I'm releasing is about De Smet, South Dakota, and is available on Kindle and in Paperback.

IMAGE COURTESY OF SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM

Tied for my favorite homesite (I won't tell you with which!), De Smet is the setting for almost the entire second half of the Little House series. As such, it's one of the most visited. From the swelling hills of open-air Ingalls Homestead to the smaller-than-you-realized Surveyors' House, De Smet offers enough real-life Little House moments for fans to fill at least a couple of days. Maybe even three. (I won't tell you how many hours my daughter has spent with the kittens on Ingalls Homestead. Let's just say I could have paid the sweet little things babysitting wages.)

Here are my top can't miss attractions in De Smet.

Ingalls Homestead. Prairie vistas. Covered wagon rides. Room to run. Cuddly kittens. Little House crafts. Whatever the ages of your family, all will enjoy a morning or an afternoon spent at Ingalls Homestead, the very land Charles Ingalls homesteaded in the 1880s—which he wouldn't have gotten if not for Mr. Edwards, the wildcat from Tennessee, holding off the other impatient homesteaders. You can even stay onsite—in a covered wagon, a bunkhouse, or your own tent.

The Surveyors' House. Remember how Laura ran ahead of the wagon to be the first inside the surveyors' house, 'the largest house she had ever lived in'? The house that felt so big to Laura is probably the size of a modern-day kitchen, but it's still tremendously exciting to be inside a home the Ingalls family actually lived in—and that Laura described so well in By the Shores of Silver Lake.

Photo © Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society, De Smet, SD.

The Third Street House. Included on the same tour is the house that Pa built on Third Street in town, which the Ingalls family moved to in 1887 from the homestead—he didn't remain a farmer after all. Ma, Mary, and Pa lived in this house for the rest of their lives. Rose Wilder Lane, Laura's journalist daughter, mentions this house in 'Grandpa's Fiddle,' published in the William Anderson–edited A Little House Reader. Look for the lovely portrait of Charles and Caroline on the wall.

Ingalls home that Pa built in 1887. Photo © Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society, De Smet, SD.

The De Smet Cemetery. Walk among the tombstones in the peaceful De Smet Cemetery, just south of town, and you'll see dozens of names you recognize from the pages of the Little House books — such as Reverend Brown, the 'fiery' pastor who married Laura and Almanzo, and his wife, also named Laura. Laura Ingalls Wilder died in Missouri, but the entire rest of her family is buried in this cemetery.

Lake Thompson. This lake that so enchanted Laura and Almanzo on their Sunday drives is southeast of De Smet a few miles, but it's worth the drive to see the expanse of the second largest natural lake in South Dakota and think about our favorite nineteenth-century couple falling in love on their buggy rides.

Calumet Avenue. Called Main Street in Laura's books, Calumet Avenue is home to so many locations familiar to its pages — like the Loftus Store, which is currently in operation as a gift shop (yes, they sell suspenders). The memorial society has set up a walking tour of this area, so check all the windows and doors as you go by so you'll know when, for example, you're standing in front of what used to be Fuller's Hardware.

Are you planning to visit any of the Little House on the Prairie locations this year? We'd love to hear about your journeys on our Facebook Page and be sure to subscribe to our free newsletter for more in-depth profiles of the best places to visit!

The following two tabs change content below.

New Dating Site De Smet Sd

Longtime professional writer Sandra Hume is a founding board member of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association, which holds the LauraPalooza conference every two years. Sandra's enthusiasm for Little House inspired a decade of publishing the Homesteader, a twice-yearly newsletter about Laura and her homesites. She now runs the website Little House Travel and writes the Land of Laura travel book series for families visiting the Little House sites.

New Dating Site De Smet Sd Card Reader

  • Tips for Family Travel to the Little House Sites and Pageants - August 5, 2018
  • Six Can't Miss Things to Do and See in De Smet, South Dakota - July 21, 2018




broken image